Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 23, 1958, Image 2

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    9
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Ceral Point
Couple Honored
On AnnWersiry
Central Point Tha silver
wedding anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs. Earnest Taylor, 543
Grand avenue, Central Point,
was celebrated June 29 with
open house in their honor at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. John
Davis, 914 Winchester street
in Medford. Mrs. Davis i3 the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Taylor.
The Taylors were married
at Dakota City, South Dakota,
June 27, 1933. They have five
children, Mrs. John Davis,
Mrs. LeRoy Lindgren, and
Dale, Robert and Mary Ann
Taylor. They have three
grandchildren, Dianna and
Denise Davis and Kenneth
Lindgren.
All thejhildren were pres
ent for the occasion except
Robert Taylor, who is station
ed with the Navy t Treasure
Island.
The anniversary cake, dec
orated by the Taylor's daughter-in-law,
Mrs. Dale Taylor,
was cut by Mrs. Lyle Parsley,
who is Mrs. Taylor's sister-in-law.Irs.
John Davis presided
at the punch bowl, and Miss
Mary Ann Taylor was in
charge $f the guest ' book.
-About 65 friends and relatives
were guests during the after
noon. Here from out of town
for the affair were; Mr. and
Mrs. Nick Smith and son Don,
from Roseburg; Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Taylor and daughters,
Mavis and Marda, Mr. and
Mrs. Ed McPherson and child
ren, Bill, Janice and Terry
Sue, all from Project City,
Calif., and Mr. and Mrs. Le
Roy Lindgren and son Ken
neth, Lakeview.
Miss Olie Duffy
Visitor in City
Miss Olive Duffy, Kalama
zoo, Mich., is In Medford to
visit her mother, Mrs. W. R.
Duffy, and brother, John Duf
fy, at their home, 1104 East
Ninth street. Miss Duffy, on
the staff of the Kalamazoo
city library system, attended
a librarian's convention in
San Francisco before coming
to Medford.
Parsons Home
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd R. Par
sons and daughter, Ann, 2329
East Main street, spent a re
cent vacation motoring
through Oregon and Wash
ington. They traveled north
by way of Portland and Seat
tle, and returned by way of
the coast route.
Op! met (WoHobV
We Solved
1 Our Small-Space
0lning Problem!'
Lots of good looks for dining nooks and
small apartments! Expands from only
42" $ud to a full 42"x59" for for
mal dising needs!
Gratefully tapered legs with soft.
r9xed brass edging around lustrous,
woodgrai Micalite.
Yotr choica of colorful, textured
vl cfcair coveting designed to Har
iri cayze with smart, contemporary decor!
Our Location Saves You Money
W Buy for Less and Sell for Less
LUCAS 'HOWARD
Hiway 99 South of Central Point North of Medford
Phones NO 4-1226 - NO 4-1227
, Wednesday, July 23, 1958
Former Residents
Arrive For Visit
Former residents visiting
in the city are Mr. and Mrs.
Grover Medley, Webb City,
Mo. Mr. Medley was an em
ployee of The California-Oregon
Power company here for
40 years before his retirement.
The Medleys plan to spend a
month here visiting with Mr.
Medley's brother and sister-in
law, Mr. and Mrs. James Med
ley, and his three sisters and
brothers-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Stinson, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Neumann and Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Lichtenstern.
Family Reunion
Held in Medford
Forty-four persons attended
a family reunion July 12-13
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon Talbott, 212 Bliss
street. This was the first time
in several years that the sons
and daughters of Mrs. N. L.
Chapman, formerly of Cen
tral Point and now of Orb
ville, Calif., had been togeth
er. Mrs. Chapman has 12 sons
and daughters, and seven at
tended, with their families.
Present for the reunion
were Mrs. Chapman, the Tal
botts, the son-in-law and
daughter at whose home the
family gathered; a son, Walt
er Chapman, Mrs. Chapman
and their children, Jerry,
Junior and Betty Jean, Mo
desto, Calif.; another son, An
drew (Pete) Chapman and
daughter, Sharon, Richmond,
Wash.; a son, John Chapman
and his sons, Gary and Steve,
Redding, Calif.; a daughter,
Mrs. Audra Carrell, Morenci,
Ariz.; a daughter and son-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow
Wilson and children, Patty
Anne, Janice, Jane and Rich
ard, Oroville, Calif.; another
daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. John Bray and child
ren, Debby and Shannon,
Florence, Ore.
Grandsons and granddaugh
ters of Mrs. Chapman and
their families present were
Mrs. Marjorie Hart and son,
Dale, Phoenix, Ariz.; Sandra
Jean Fitz, Sedona, Ariz.; Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Carroll, Dan
ny and Carol; Mr. and Mrs.
David Price and children,
Lorene, Roy, Carol and Ken
ny, all of Morenci, Ariz.; Mr.
an,d Mrs. Robert Aldredge and
son, David, Medford. P. M.
Aldredge, Medford, also at
tended. In Portland
Mrs. Naomi Van Dyke and
daughter, Bonnie, 204 Brad
ford Way, spent a recent va
cation in Portland with Mrs.
Van Dyke's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. John Hohman.
5 pc. group
as shown)
79
50
$8950
7 pc.
$"750 per
Pay only 'month
s i
Hamburgers and frankfurters
for more popular picnic fare ...
Picnic chatter is undoubtedly
one of the main topics of con
versation during this time of
the year and it should be since
July is National Picnic Month.
Backyard, patio or beach, a
picnic can be enjoyed by any
age group. Fresh air, good
weather, enormous appetites
and friendships all go together
to make a successful picnic
Food is one of the main fac
tors in planning a picnic. Reba
Staggs, meat expert, has this
Picnic Meat Loaf to suggest.
Here, an everyday recipe ac
quires a new use. See how!
v Picnic Meat Loaf
1 pound ground beef
pound ground pork
1 cup tomato juice
Fashion Decrees Earrings
Long and Necklaces Short
By GAY PAULEY
UPI Women's Editor
New York (UPD Long
earrings and short necklaces
that's the long and short of
it in costume jewelry for fall.
Some of the new "slim jim"
earrings dangle all the way to
the shoulder, reports the Fash
i o n Coordination institute
which keeps tabs on basic
beauty and fashion trend. And
the short bib, choker and dog
collar necklaces, with many
strands twisted together, have
displaced the long ropes which
we women have draped
around our necks the past few
seasons.
If you still want to use
your rope supply, double,
triple or quadruple it around
the neck, so it forms a fill-in
for all those standaway col
lars showing in fall ready-to-wear.
"Next in importance is col
or in jewelry," said Mrs.
Charlotte Thompson, the in
stitute director. "Jewelry
shades go right along with
clothing shades. So all the
purples, including amethyst
and mauve, will be good. So
will the combinations of
green and blue, red and rose."
Bar Pin Returns
Some manufacturers suggest
Tops Everything
front
9144
SIZES 1
12-20; 40, 42 j
try irrie'iir&tf
Sew-Easy Printed Pattern!
See the diagram even a be
ginner can whip up this ter
rific topper in jiffy-time. Note
casual lines, turn-back cuffs.
Choose wool, faille or cotton
in black, navy, or bright col
ors. Printed Pattern 9144:
Misses' sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20;
40, 42. Size 16 takes 2?s
yards 54-inch.
Printed directions on each
pattern part. Easier, accu
rate. Send THIRTY-FIVE cents
(coins for this pattern add 5
cents for each pattern for
first-class mailing. Send to
Marian Martin, care Medford
Mail Tribune, Pattern Dept.,
232 West 18th St., New York
11, N.Y. Print plainly NAME,
ADDRESS, SIZE and STYLE
NUMBER.
1)
are taking a side step this season
Picnio Meat Loaf.
4 slices toasted bread :
Vi. cup chopped onion
2 tablespoons chopped green
pepper
VA teaspoons salt
M teaspoon pepper
teaspoon sage
1 tablespoon Worcestershire
sauce
2 eggs, slightly beaten
Pour tomato juice over toast
Combine ground beef and pork,
onion, green pepper and season
ings. Add beaten eggs, toasted
bread and tomato juice. Mix
thoroughly. Pack meat into two
No. 2 cans or in a 5 x 9-inch loat
pan. Bake the cans of meat loaf
in a moderate oven (350 F.)
for 1 hour. For loaf pan, bake
IY4. hours.
that women blend jewelry col
ors with suit or dress, but Mrs.
Thompson said it'd be up to
the individual to decide
whether she wanted contrast
or coordination of colors.
New for fall is the bar pin,
which grandma wore to hold
the tabs of her high-starched
collar. Today's bar pins are
longer, some of them measur
ing three inches, and splashi
er, set with colored stones.
New way to wear them: in
pairs, on standaway collars of
blouses.
' The old - time headache
band, which came back last
spring, goes right into fall.
It's expected to be especially
popular with "two major
trends in hair-do's the bouf
fant or fluffy cut, and the
empire which has soft, flat
strands at the front and side
but, builds to a pile at the
back of the crown.
Some jewelry manufactur
ers show small, lightweight
pins in a series of three, four
or five to attach to the bands.
Matching clip on suit or dress
is all the other jewelry neces
sary. Masses of Stones
Pins have a new place In
fashion, literally. Gone is the
longtime placement on the
left shoulder; this fall, they
come as globs of fobs to be
worn smack in the center of a
neckline or bodice.
Some of these masses of
stones form pins three and
four inches across. But if you
buy this much of a showpiece,
better confine it to evening
wear, Mrs. Thompson said. If
your cocktail or evening frock
has a low-plunging back, clip
a pin at the base. ,
I personally was hoping the
stylists would decree the end
of the dangling bracelets; but
there's still just as much
jingle-jangle as ever because
sleeve lengths come just be
low the elbow and the space
on down has to be filled in
with something. There are
however, some rigid, or
"domed" bracelets meant to
be worn in pairs on the wrists.
Camp White Club
Varies Weekly Play
Camp White Camp White
Veterans Bridge club varied
play for the weekly session
last Friday by drawing for
partners. Pat Stuart, Salem,
was a visiting player.
North-south winners for the
evening were Mrs. Fred Reh
ling and Mrs. Frank R. Baker,
first, 80H; Mrs. George Dean
and George Polski, second,
76; D. L. Barber, Trail, and
Richard House, third, 71'j.
East-west winners were
Mrs. Jack Mitchell and Mrs.
Sam Van Dyke, 70, first; Mrs.
Thomas Randall and John
Thompson, second, 65'A; Mr.
Randall and Jack Mitchell,
third, 64'.j.
Throw-Away Aprons
Now on Market
New York (UPD Aprons
and tablecloths which can be
used until soiled and then
thrown away now are on the
market.
Made of a cloth-like mater
ial called "dura-weve," the
products are sold through su
permarkets, variety, drug and
department stores. One set in
cludes "His" and "Her" bar
becue aprons with matching
tablecloth. The material looks
and feels like cloth, but ac
tually is paper, with an "inner-lining"
of rayon thread.
Embossing and printing give
it the look of a loomed fabric.
Medford Couple
Travels in Canada
Mr. and Mrs. Noel Erskine,
1304 Kings highway, traveled
to Victoria and Vancouver,
B.C., recently for a vacation.
Their visit coincided with
that of Princess Margaret of
the British Royal family, and
the Erskines saw the princess
a number of times.
They report that in addition
to the visit of Princess Mar
garet, the centennial oi the
province was celebrated with
a variety of programs and dis
plays including elaborate fire
works. The Erskines were in
terested in the 32 ships all in
the harbor at the same time
for the celebration.
In the news from Nanaimo,
B. C-, was the story of the
cutting of a huge centennial
cake by Princess Margaret.
The cake, 17 feet tall, was es
timated to weigh 10,000
pounds. Used in the cake
were 600 dozen eggs and 1500
pounds of sugar. It was re
ported that Princess Margaret
saved two pieces of the cake
to take back to her niece and
nephew, Prince Charles and
Princess Ann.
While in Victoria the Er
skines particularly enjoyed a
visit to the famous Buchart
gardens.
.
Court Announces
Annual Breakfast
Sunday Morning
Roxy Ann court, Order of
the Amaranth, will have its
annual outdoor breakfast at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Hoppe, 305 Lozier
lane, Sunday, July 27 be
tween the hours of 8 a.m. and
1 p. m. This event is for mem
bers and their invited guests.
Mrs. Frank Little and Stan
ley Jones are in charge of
arrangements.
Y Knot Twirlers Set
Dance Thursday Night
The Y Knot Twirlers Square
Dance club will hold a dance
in the social hall of the Med
ford YMCA starting about
8:30 Thursday.
Kenneth Hood, Medford,
will call squares, and all
square dancers are invited.
Potluck refreshments will be
served.
When you wear your hair
in a French twist or chignon
you can wear hats with fitted
crowns by pinning up your
hair in a high, flat twisted
loop.
Delight a Bride
Canning revival of an old
tradition record of the most
important day of the bride's
life with this wedding sam
pler. Personally hers to treas
ure always! Pattern 7031:
transfer of 12x1 6-inch sam
pler, color chart, framing di
rections. Send THIRTY-FIVE cents
(coins) for this pattern add 5
cents for each pattern for
first-class maling. Send to
Medford Mail Tribune, House
hold Arts Dept., P.O. Box 168,
Old Chelsea Station, New
York 11, N.Y. Print plainly
NAME, ADDRESS , PAT
TERN NUMBER.
Send TWENTY-FIVE cents
more for a copy of our Alice
Brooks Needlecraft Catalogue.
Two complete patterns are
printed right hi the book . . .
plus a variety of designs that
you will want to .'order: cro
chet, knitting, embroidery,
huck weaving, quilts, toys,
dolls.
m
FURS
Repairing and Reiining
Cleaning and Glazing
-' Restyling
Frances' Furs
610 Valley View
SAME PHONE SP 2-6526
No Gourmets
On Early Space Ships
New York (UPD The early
space ships will be no place
for a gourmet.
The space man's diet may
be one of the least attractive
features of his travels. Dr. G.
C. Clark, a Navy doctor, told
a recent Washington confer
ence on aviation medicine. He
said it might resemble sugar
water, filled with shreds of
paper towel.
Other military doctors and
scientists agree. They say
that hot foods, for instance,
are not necessary from a die
tary standpoint, and might
even be considered a luxury
in the cramped quarters of a
space ship.
Nevertheless, res earchers
think they have licked the
problem of feeding space trav
elers on short trips say a
five-day journey to and from
the moon. ,
Plastic Bags
It's not what space men will
eat, but how their food will
be packed, that poses one of
the biggest problems.
One possible solution is a
sort ot eat now, skimp later
plan. A man preparing for a
round-trip to the moon would
need essentially energy foods,
the experts said. He might
store up fats and sugars
through carefully chosen
meals several days before the
blastoff time, to augment a
plain, lighter diet on the
space ship.
The container for his out-
of-this-world meals is expect
ed to be something like pres
ent household freezer bags.
These plastic bags fill the ba
sic requirements for space
travel: they're lightweight,
will hold food so that it won't
break up and float around a
weightless cabin, and are re
usable. The no-litter problem is a
touchy one, because you can't
just eject trash from a space
ship, the experts said. If you
did, they explained, it would
simply orbit, or fly along
with the ship, instead of fall
ing away and bursting into
minute particles.
Chemist Likely
Because of the garbage dis
posal problem space ship ex
perts are seriously recom
mending that a chemist, rath
er than a chef, be assigned
to each crew. The chemist
would run a small laboratory
to recycle foods and prevent
dangerous poisons from de
veloping from carbon dioxide
trapped in the ship.
Researchers haven't 6s yet
chosen specific foodstuffs to
fill the space man's dietary
requirements, although they
FINAL CLEAN-UP
Reg. to
$22.95
Reg. to
$14.95
Reg. to
$11.95
Need Apply
say for long trips he'll need
the usual balanced diet of car
bohydrates, proteins, miner
als, fats and proteins. He'll
also need more bulky foods,
to prevent hunger pangs.
Still, there will be no room
for frills, and food in paste
form is one possibility sug
gested by the American Can
company. This firm is cur
rently working on a high-altitude
feeding device for jet
plane crews that they say
might just as easily be used
by space men.
The container, shaped like
a toothpaste tube, hooks into
the helmet of a pressurized
space suit by means of a plas
tic feeding tube. Food would
pass through the tube as it
was squeezed or rolled up.
Doesn't sound very appetiz
ing, but .what pioneer ever
had it easy?
Eventually, scientists ex
pect space travelers to dine
on irradiated food, which can
be preserved indefinitely
without refrigeration and
heavy packaging.
Alumnae Club
To Hold Meeting
Members of Southern Ore
gon Kappa Alpha Theta Alum--
nae club are asked to attend
an "important meeting", Mon
day, July 28th, at 11 a.m. at
the home of Mrs. Otto Frohn
mayer, 1656 Spring street.
Any Thetas new to this area
are also invited. For further
information members may
call Mrs. John Dellenback,
SPring 2-6855.
Visits in Alpine
Mrs. Kenneth D. Knack-
stedt, 128 Mistletoe avenue.
left Medford Tuesday for Al
pine, Ore., where she was
called due to the illness of her
mother, Mrs. C. L. Levine.
While there she will also visit
her father at Alpine and a sis
ter, Mrs. Marvin P. Johnsen,
Eugene.
She plans to return to Med
ford later this week.
Calendar
Thursday:
12:30 p.m. Sojourners
club, Girls Community club.
6:30 p.m.; Golden Link
class, First Baptist church, at
N. A. Mead home, Grant rd
6:30 p.m. Zonta club,
home of Mrs. Edith Gifford,
419 South Oakdale ave.
To clean corners of square
cake pans, coffee spouts and
percolator stems, moisten a
cotton swab and dip it in
cleanser.
Last Pays
Burelson's Shoe
Prices slashed again ort all our'summer shoes.
We still have many lovely styles in casuals,
flats, hi-heels, mid-heel, etc. All colors includ
ing white.
3 BIG GROUPS!
......... Now
Now
.... Now
Of!
Economist Gives
Some Tips on
Outdoor Cookery
Champaign, 111. flJPD If
you haven't tried fried al fres
co dining, you may be miss
ing a lot of eating enjoyment,
says Mrs. Rita McGreer, a
University of Illinois home
economist. "Sizzling steaks or
roasts grilled over an out
door fire are hard to beat,"
she said.
Here are some tips for out-of-doors
cooking Mrs. Mc
Greer offers:
Provide lots of food . . .
outdoor appetites are hearty,
and about a pound of steak
per person Isn't too much.
Use evenly cut steaks at
least an inch and a half thick,
prime quality if possible, but
porterhouse or sirloin from
choice or good quality beef
is a good buy. If rump round
or flank steaks are used have
them tenderized.
If the grill is small and
there are several persons cook
one large, thick steak and
serve slices. Otherwise indi
vidual steaks are preferable.
Trim off excess fat, brush
with barbecue sauce or rub
with garlice clove if you like,
and use some of the trim
mings to rub the hot grill to
keep the steak from sticking.
For medium steaks allow
15 to 20 minutes on each side
thick, longer if they are
thicker. Top with pats of but
ter, and serve sizzling hot.
If you have a grill with a
revolving spit, a roast is ex
cellent for outdoor entertain
ing. Use a slow fire, mount
the roast well balanced on
the spit, and baste with but
ter or barbecue sauce while
cooking. Many type roasts are
excellent for outdoor cooking.
A thin glaze of brown paint
will soften the glare of white
or other bright shades. Add
the glaze over the color.
TERMS! Use
ACME'S Budget
Plan No Down
Payment en
, Approved
Credit
IMCMWITS
245 South
$"5788
V
$E88
ALL SA
ES
SHUT
Main and Bartleft Sts.
Medford,
TT Modal S-P
H,1A95
wGmraUMd W V ,
LGw4noittkMa(l gSK ,
ftce J -
1
$3
Woman Finishes
Forty-Four Years
As Car Salesman
Harrisburg, Pa. (UPD
Mrs. Ora C. Shaffer, 63, mads
her first automobile sale in
1914, a used Hupmobile she
had bought for $65 and sold
for $200, and decided right
then that selling cars "wasn't
a bad occupation."
After 44 years and over
10,000 sales, Mrs. Shafer is
retiring at least, officially.
Unofficially, she aid she
would still sell cars "to any
one who wants to buy one
from me."
Her secret of success?
The usual "hard work, good
judgment and an honest ef
fort to make and keep friends '
by giving them satisfactory
service." 1
But she has an added tip
for the modern salesman:
"Pay more attention to the
woman in the family. She's
the one who makes most of
the decisions."
Mrs. Shaffer learned to
drive at the age of 19, when
not more than 25 geop in
Harrisburg owned automo
biles. Wheeling around in her
Abbott Detroit, she had then
the distinction of being one
of the first two women in the
area to1 drive a car.
By the time she was 20,
Mrs. Shaffer had her own
Agency with a Huffman Sic
franchise, which she main
tained until the Huffman was
discontinued.
She remembers that in her
first truck sale, the customer
traded in a horse for $32.50
toward the purchase of his
vehicle. She sold the horse
the same day for the tradei
price she had paid.
"The outcome was not quit
what we expected, the horse
died the next day," she said.
"But then, we never tlid give
out used horse guarantees."
SPACE PROBLEMS?
Solve them with d
COSCff UTILITY CART
Here's mobile work center that pro
vide ample itorage tpace for bulkiest
kitchen appliance. An ideal serving cart
well. Wgh; top and
helves, 16' x with
tough, baked-on enamel fin
ish in choice of colors. Chro
mium legs and handles.
''FREE
PARKING
Air
Conditioned
COOL
IN HOMfWAIISI
Central at 10th
Choose From These
Name Brands?
DeLiio Debt
Paliizio
Hill Data
-. Florsheim
Ferrano'a
Joyca
Town and Country
Heydays
Joeelli
Foot Flair .
Confettet
Lucky Strides
Cobblers
Cirranas
Showoffs
Old Main Trotters
YOUR
CHARGE
ACCOUNT
INVITED
FINAL!
Ph6ne SP 25428
Oregon
' S