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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 27, 1958)
o V'trffiai.-.ifiiiiiii., ( m mm r i hi Ti'Tii-'3 I . A brownie is a brownie? 'Taint necessarily so. There are plain brownies, frosted brownies, brownie-crusted ice cream pits aatl row brownies topped with sour cream! Made frors p brownie mix and backed in a pie pan, the sour cfeagn is spooned over the brownies, garnished with shaved semi-sweet chocolate, and then popped back in the oven, just long enpugh for the cream, to set. Cool and then cut. into pie-shaped pieces. For the Brownies you will need a 10-inch pie plate, 1 package brownie mix, 1 cup sour cream, cfiocolate syrup or shaved semi-sweet chocolate. P ii are brownie mixture according to package directions. Spread better in a buttered 10-inch pie plate. Bake recom menced time in a 350 degree preheated oven. Remove from oven. gpr$d sour cream over baked brownie. Dribble a stream of chocolate syrup lightly over cream or garnish with sh(9ed semi-sweet chocolate. Return to oven for-5 minutes. Cool. Cut pie-shaped pieces. Best when served the same day as prepared. T MfSiK I . I it fS ' ' Mel Hi ; OTI Mit SMOULDER Sergeant-at-Arms Archie War rt lis' fesist peeking over his shoulder as Princess Ftnt isses by, on her visit to the City Hall in Van tPUWt Cinadl. Medford Woman Now Serving as Museum Hostess Mrs. Lloyd L. Sanders of Medford is spending the sum mer in Alaska. While there she is serving as hostess at the Sheldon Jackson museum in Sitka which is a part of the Sheldon Jackson Junior college operated by the Pres byterian Board of National Missions. The museum contains a col lection of native arts and crafts as well as Russian rel ics. The school is the only private school in Alaska offer ing secondary education. Mrs. Sanders plans to visit Anchorage, Mt. McKinley Na tional park, Fairbanks, Skag way, Whitehorse, Glacier Bay and Juneau before returning to Woodburn, Ore., where she spends much of her time with a son, Philip Sanders. Banana-Cinnamon Rolls New York (lIPD Young sters will go for these banana cinamon rolls. Brush butter on top of 6 brown-n-serve butter flake rolls. Partially separate each roll into five equal parts. Combine 3 tablespoons sugar and Vz teaspoon cinnamon. Coat 30 slices of banana in the mixture.-Insert a banana slice between open sections of each roll. Bake in a greased shallow pan in a hot oven (400 degrees) for 12 minutes. - - Herb Sauce for Steaks San Francisco (UPD Mari nate meat for broiled steaks or hamburgers overnight in wine and herbs, suggests the California Foods Research in stitute. Then make this easy sauce for the grilled meat. Mix 1 tablespoon each of mus tard and Worces tershire sauce, 3 tablespoons butter, and V2 cup of sherry. Heat slowly until the butter melts. Pour hot over meat. - - ' Drapery Heading If you're making new cot ton draperies, the tedious job of sewing in pinch pleats "is no longer necessary. You can buy a special heading for draw draperies and slipping hooks. All you do is stitch the heading onto the draperies, and slip prongs of the pins into the casings. The pleats form perfectly and instantly. in m hi """" Visiting the Sheldon Jackson museum in Sitka, Alaska, are several teachers participating in a leaching program there this summer. Greeting the visitors is Mrs. Lloyd L. Sanders (left) of Medford who is serving as hostess at the museum. Visitors are (third from right) Mrs. Esfella Tiffany, director of student leaching at Whitworth college, Spokane, Wash.; Mrs. Guslar Schlauch, and Dr. Schlauch, head of the sociology department at Whitworth college. The summer program is being conducted at ' Sheldon Jackson Junior college. (Bob Slearly photo) .... . . 'Garden of Blind' Slated in Portland Portland (UPD A scented "garden for the blind" will be one feature of the Garden of Tomorrow at next year's Ore g o n Centennial Exposition and International Trade Fair here, according to the Oregqn Centennial commission. ; The garden for the blind, to be described by garden board member Dr. E. G. Chin- ard at a meeting here next Wednesday, will be patterned after a similar garden in Brooklyn. Labels on flowers and arrangements will be printed in braille. - Garden manager Eddie Boatwight reported Friday that 12 nations have signified their intent to participate in the garden so far by sending rare and unusual plant ma terial native to their lands. Today: 3 p.m. Cascade lodge AF and AM, Casey's park. Monday: 11 a.m. Southern Oregon Kappa Alpha Theta Alumnae club, with Mrs. Otto Frohn- mayer, loots spring st. Tuesday: 10:30 ajn.-12:30 pjn. Med ford League of Women Voters, swim party at home of Mrs. John Day at Gold Rey. 12:30 p.m. Jacksonville First Presbyterian church Women's association, with Mrs. John Keaveny, Hueners lane. 12:30-4:30 p.m. Medford League of Women Voters, with Mrs. John Day, Gold Rey. Wednesday: ; ! 11 a.m. Townsend club, Hawthorne park. . 12 noon Fidelity club, home of Mrs. Lloyd Smith, 3232 Jacksonville highway. Thursday:.! ' V ; 7:30 p.m. Welcome Wagon club members and husbands, tour of Rogue Valley hospital. Friday: 10 . a.m. Roxy Ann court breakfast with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hoppe, Lozier lane. 1 p.m. Getogether club picnic, with Mrs. Alfred Of ford, Roberts rd. Saturday: 8 pjn. Rogue Valley Coun try club night in Paris party, Rogue Valley Country club. Wgshable Play Shoes Oxford and strap styles . . . lots of colors and sizes to select from! "Swim Suits" Boys and Girls Styles SUMMER CLEARANCE ON THE NORTH WEST'S BEST KNOWN PLAYWEAR LINE . . . SHORTS . . . PEDAL PUSHERS . . . TOPS . . . Sizes 1 to 6 Sizes 7 to 14 and Subteen LEON'S TOTS-TO TEENS 30ff Boys' and Girls' PAJAMAS : 105 E. Main Girls' Dr&sses I is OX Jyly Clearance Come in and see the TREMENDOUS SAVINGS en Children's Clothes During Our Big July Clearance Sale! You will SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! II to 99 Extra Special Sale on Coats For final "Clean-up" on one rack of Dusters and Coats. They Will Be Reduced $1.00 Daily Until Sold! Boys' Sport Shirts "Subteen Dresses" All summer 99 styles . . . also ' . t . 7 to 14 sizes JS) , to 99 Boy or Girl Topper Sets $149 Boys' Slax isiies2tolO . Make this hit-or-miss auilt by the "Penny-Saver" meth od! Buy a little fabric for a few blocks. : . ' A thrill to work this quilt into your budget! Pattern 7217: directions. . charts. Dat- tern of Datches. Yardages, sin gle, double-bed quilt. You can use scraps. Send THIRTY -FIVE cents (coins) for this pattern add 5 cents for each riattern for lst-class mailing. 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, and PAT TERN NUMBER. ? : A Send TWENTY-FIVE cents more for a copy of our Alice Brooks Needlecraft Catalog. Two complete patterns are printed right in the book. . . plus a variety of designs that you will want to order: cro chet, knitting, . embroidery, huck- weaving, quilts, toys, dolls. Family Outing Ends in Tragedy Newport (UPD A uleasant family outing ended in trage dy Friday when two persons drowned in the" Siletz river on the Walter Dickenson farm about one half mile north of Siletz. State police said. Mrs . and Mrs. Vernon Graves of Toledo and their: five-year-old niece, Lynn ; Elice Thomas of . New port, -were having a picnic when Vernon Graves, 36, put his-niece on his back and at tempted to swim across the river. Police said the man, who was reported to be an "expert swimmer" apparently $ went in the water after eating lunch..The drowning occurred at 3 p.m. Mrs. Graves told police she saw them swim out and about halfway across the river, they appeared to be - in serious trouble. She said she went for help. ! . - The bodies were recovered at 3:35 p.m. 'by "Joseph and Robert7 Miller, employees of the Kennedy Logging com pany of Sweet Home, j State police said they tried artificial respiration and fire men from New port used a resuscitator to no avail. v Mrs. Graves was hospital ized for shock, i The British Columbia tour ist industry is valued at neaf- Hardy Tomafo Variety Turned Up Geneva, N. Y. (UPI) Research at the New -York State Agricultural Experi ment Station has turned up a promising new hardy tomato variety known as "Geneva 11." . . . ; . Development stemmed from a search for an early, high yielding, well-colored tomato resistant , to the distructive verticillium wilt disease. Cornell University plant breeders here say the tomato is recommended asan early and main crop variety for growers of processing toma toes. It also may find a place with market gardeners where special attention is given to spacing and harvesting. Total yields of Geneva 11 have av eraged higher than any other variety in trials at the Experi ment Station, they note. . , "Geneva 11 is a promising variety developed from 1 a series of crosses using Red Jacket and lines resistant to verticillium wilt," the scien tists said, fit has been planted on a limited scale by growers for the past four ye-rs, and in most - case h as attracted favorable attention because of its good yield, relative free dom from verticillium wilt; and general good quality." ! Fruit Cup Enjoy a frosty fruit cup, served with thin fingers of raisin bread toast, for dessert. Add 13 cup muscatel wine and 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice to each 3 cups cut fruit of your choice; chill. Top each serving with a small scoop of raspberry or lime sherbet. -;.-:".! Ripe Olive Quickie ! - "Ripe olive; quickie' of the month: . Luncheon casserole for 6. Butter 6 slices of bread; quarter. Cube enough Ameri can cheese to make.2V cups. Cut ripe olives into wedges to make 1 cup; alternate lay ers of bread, cheese, olives' in IV2 quart casserole, ending with cheese. Combine 3 slight ly beaten eggs; 2V& cups milk, 1 teaspoon salt; pour into cas serole. Bake ' in 325 degree oven 40" minutes. II WINNING1 J'Miss,' tr. S. A;" t it 1 e,' E u i"l y h e. Howell, Louisiana, is given' big chance of winning . "Miss Universe" title in. Long Beach, .Calif., finals. . . MAIL TRIBUNE, MtJferd, Orttn, Sunday, July V. 19SS 7K Former "Senator Dies" In Denver Home ' Denver-UPD Former Sen. Eugene D. Millikin, one of the political giants of Colorado, died here Saturday.. He was 67.,., , ' Millikin contracted pneu monia Thursday night, triumvirate in the U.S. Senate, viving member of . a great triumbirate in the U.S. Senate. Arthur A. Vandenberg of Michigan and Robert A. Taft of Ohio were the other mem bers of the triumivrate that dominated Jhe Republican side of the Senate for years. t Millikin, often called the senators' Senator, served vig orously in the U.S. Senate for 15 years, . although a victim of crippling arthritis for more than a quarter of a century. In 'July of 1956, senators rose to their feet to laud Millikin for his long record of leadership in the Senate. It seemed that Millikin, a tower ing figure, in the Senate since he took . his seat in December of 1941, , would continue 'n Cengress until his death. But he announced in 1956 he would retire. He was succeed ed by Sen. John Carroll,! a Democrat. . ; Repairing and Refining Cleaning and Glazing , Restyling - Frances9 Furs 610 Valley View SAME PHONE SP 2-6526 TRY OUR BUDGET WISE DRYCLEANING ait low, low prices New. Counter Prices o DRESSES Plain 1 o SUITS if:: 2-pc.Men's-Ladies $S10 .7.-'.-L;tJl-.-7. .. r . New: Counter Prices Skirts " Slacks Pants ; Sweaters " Blouses (Plain) Shirts " 55 ACME CLEANERS O Cash Carry O 1728 N. Riverside SP 24263 PUTFOHM in Beautiful at Prices You Can't Afford to Miss! Fabrics o V, tr-.- 3250 $00 Down Contract Payments May-Be Made. in . MEDFORD - -or Central Point . m 00 Week jyiLY DURING OUR -COLORS ,FJa.mingo Green ; (in 4 shidei) . . ; , CharcoaL:ri.; illifWn ani tweed) Brown t s. Red:;; ;.!; ' 1:': CP jp mm Shop in the Only Air Conditioned Furniture Barn in the Pacific Northwest! ' IT'S COOL IN OUR STORE! FREE SODA POP FOR EVERYONE FREEPARKING No Stairs to Climb 0PEH DAILY Until 8 p.m. r Except Saturdays Hiway 99 South of Central Point - North of Medford DL Kin - Nfya.1777 s ly $100 million annually. ,