MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford Or.
'Homemaker
Substitute for
By PATRICIA WIGGINS
United Press International
Washington-CPD-A govern
ment expert predicts a major
expansion in the next few
years in what could be de
scribed as today's substitute
for yesterday's relatives.
It's called Homemaker
Service.
Said Miss Maude Morlock,
Children's Bureau specialist
"When I was a child, we
were- always surrounded by
relatives and felt as much at
home in their houses as in my
own.
"When something happened
Van Antwerp
To Call at Fair
Bob VanAntwerp, Long
Beach, Calif., win be guest
caller at the Josephine Coun
ty Fair square dance starting
at 8:30 p.m. Friday. The dance
is being sponsored by the
Rogue Valley Square Dance
Callers association.
Mr. VanAntwerp is in
charge of the Long Beach Rec
reation center, and has writ
ten several square and round
dances. He has recorded
dances on Black Mountain and
McGregour labels.
Saturday night, the callers
association will sponsor a jam
boree-type dance with mem
bers of theh association call
ing. The dance will start at
8:30 p.m.
Following the Saturday
night dance, doughnuts and
coffee will be served at Take
It Easy lodge on Savage Creek
rd. near Rogue River.
Former Clerks
Attend Dinner
A group of valley residents
who were formerly clerks for
the late Clarence Meeker in
the old M and M store, now
occupied by the Woolworth
company, held a get-together
dinner party recently at the
home of Mrs. W. F. Phillips,
12 Ross lane.
The event, held In the Phil
lips garden, was attended by
Miss Marie Walker, Mrs. John
Coble, Jacksonville; Miss
Gladys Whitson, Ashland; Mrs.
Krank Smith, Central Point;
Mrs. Monta Davis, Mrs. James
Fleming, Mrs. Jessie Laing,
Mrs. Edna Purcel, Mrs. Har
old Elliott, Mrs. W. F. Phil
lips and Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Brandon, all Medford.
Also attending was Miss
Olga Pagel, Portland, a guest
of Miss Walker.
The evening was spent in
talking and taking pictures.
The group decided to meet
again next year.
CALENDAR
Wednesday:
11 a.m. - Medford Town
send club. Carpenters halL
123VS West Main st.
Noon-Mistletoe club, picnic
luncheon at Mrs. Dave Fray
sher, 2035 Sunset dr.
2
f I
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The Quality Leader for More Than
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PRICES
START AT
Larson Appliance Co.
"Medford's Home Laundry Specialists"
406 E. MAIN PHONE SP 2-5302
Tuesday, Aug. 11, 1959
Service7 Is
Relatives
at my house, the relatives ei
ther moved in to help, or the
I children moved oyer until the
crisis was past."
Today, she noted, family
and relatives are usually scat
tered. The family helping
hand is no longer within reach
when unexpected illness of
other trouble strikes. That's
where Homemaker Service
comes in.
Child Care
The idea was started in the
late 1920's in Philadelphia as
a means of providing child
care in troubled homes. Today
it has broadened in scope and
is included in programs of 148
private and public agencies in
32 states and the District of
Columbia. t
But, said Miss Morlock, the
estimated 1,800 women serv
ing as substitute relatives full
and part time around the
country ar e"but a drop in the
bucket to what is needed."
A national conference on
Homemaker Services, held in
Chicago this month, will try
to spread interest in the pro
grams to more communities.
It will be supported by the
Children's Bureau and other
health, education and welfare
units' 26 national voluntary
agencies.
The substitute relatives may
be paid by a sponsoring agen
cy if a needy family can't af
ford the Sometimes minimum
pay. They help out in such
times as when work keeps a
mother away from young chil
dren; when an aged couple
needs a bit of outside cheer
or help an hour or two a day;
when a young mother needs
help with a new baby; when
illness hospitalizes a mother,
Expansion Predicted
Miss Morlock predicts an
expansion of the Homemaker
Service for the following
reasons:
The increasing mobility of
the American family, separat
ing more and more couples
from relatives; smaller homes
and apartments minus that
spare room for a helpful rela
tive from afar; the growing
number of working mothers;
increasing emotional and men
tal breakdowns in today's
complicated world; the great
er frequency of divorce and
separations; the growing num
ber of aged in the population,
and mounting hospital and
medical costs.
The Homemaker Service is
not entirely a one-way street
of help for the troubled fam
ily, Miss Morlock pointed out.
For a middle-aged widow or
a mother whose children have
grown, such Homemaker
work frequently is exactly
what she needs or would like
to keep her oar in and her in
terests humming.
As a result, many women
employed as Homemakers are
in the 40 to 60 age group
best designed to fill the bill
for a substitute friendly aunt
or cousin.
. .
Almost all of the world
supply of rubies comes from
sources in India.
$15995
Potpourri
Portland-Ifs Monday morning and 9 o'clock and Pot
pourri is on vacation. And so what do we do? We take type
writer (an old Underwood loaned by the Multnomah hotel)
in hand and write. So many of our days begin in this fashion
that somehow the week wouldn't start off well otherwise.
The two of us visited Roseburfc yesterday. We had planned
to do so on that Sunday before the disaster which struck
the city last week, so did not change our plans. It seemed
that a goodly share of southern Oregon had the same idea.
Traffic was very heavy, and since all entrances to the city
are patrolled by police or men in Army, uniform-we took
them to be National Guardsmen, it takes a long time to get
anywhere.
In spite of the bustling traffic and many people at work
replacing glass and otherwise repairing damage, there is a
note of gloom in the city. The enormity of the task of re
building and renovation made necessary by the explosion
and fire which demolished such a large part of the business
district last week, is beginning to bear down. We were told
that meetings of city and state officials, attorneys and insur
ance representatives were to be held this week to begin the
colossal task of planning the rebuilding. There is much talk
of damage suits.
Pappy and Potpourri called on the Paul Helwegs, whom
we have known for many years, and who own a fine home
on Riverside, avenue across the river from the city about
a quarter of a mile from the center of the town "as the crow
flies." Their story of the disastrous night must be much the
same as that of hundreds of other householders.
Mrs. Helweg heard the fire siren blow and got out of
bed to look toward the city. Seeing nothing, she returned
to bed. In a few minutes the siren sounded again and about
the time she stirred and wondered if she should get up again,
the night was shattered with the huge explosion and a big
window a few feet from their bed broke into bits and fell
in on the Helwegs. The Helwegs thought, as it seems nine
out of ten Roseburg residents did, that the city had been
hit by an atom bomb. Remembering what they had read,
the couple, with Mrs. Helweg's sister who had come from
the Mid-West to visit, hurried to the basement, picking up
a small radio as they went. Plugged in, the radio was silent.
After a time Mr. H. went to the phone and finding it work
ing, asked the operator "What happened?" The frightened
woman said "I don't know I just don't know!"
Eventually the Helwegs and their guest began to walk
around the house and in the yard and street, as others were
doing. Everyone was quite dazed no one knew quite what
to do next. It was some time before Mrs. Helweg discovered
that her hands were covered with blood and it was realized
that she had a large cut on her back one which required
several stitches to close when she at length could be treated
by a physician.
The Helwig's neighborhood is quite near the hospital-
which lost dozens of windows and received patients into
rooms littered with glass and with contents knocked askew
by the terrific blast. When a fire started in back of the
hospital building, neighborhood men gathered to put it out.
When the Helwegs returned to their home and began
to check the damage they found the heavy front door, which
had been locked, had been blown inward, and the casings
ripped loose. The knob and other hardware lay on the floor.
A back door was in a similar state. Cupboard doors were
wrenched open and the contents dumped on the floor. Mrs.
H. particularly remembered the spice closet "everything
was scattered around I had to sweep up stuff like parsley
flakes."
Plastered ceilings are somewhat cracked, and blinds dam
aged. It seems that in some homes where draperies were
drawn across the window, glass ripped great holes as the
sharp sections blasted inward. (Thousands upon thousands
of pieces of plywood and sheets of plastic were used to
cover the damaged windows.)
Householders are worrying about how to be sure all the
glass is cleaned up. Sunday the Helweg's son-in-law and
daughter, the Terry Herchers and their two small sons, were
up from Medford. Since the broken windows fell both in
and outside, the older folk kept a sharp lookout and warned
the older Hercher boy not to play in the grass near the
windows.
People about the city show
have cuts on legs and arms, bandaged limbs, facial cuts and
scalp wounds.
We were told that practically no one is being allowed
into the area where the blast
is the heaviest with the exception of property owners, cer
tain officers and others whose business is of the utmost
importance. Sunday the ruins were still hot and smoking
and the task of hunting for bodies and carrying on other
needed work will not get underway until the rubble has
cooled. Banks, hotels, stores, shops all business right down
town is stopped. The main post office is closed and business
Saturday was conducted from sub-stations.
The task of cleaning up the wreckage presents a different
problem to every business man or merchant. It is said, for
instance, that a jeweler whose store was almost demolished
is endeavoring to sweep up and save the rubbish in front of
his building. Much of his stock of diamonds and other small
jeweled pieces was blown into the street. By sifting through
and examining each bit of this rubble, he may be able to
recover some of the stock.
The bus depot, where we boarded the Greyhound Sunday
evening, has windows boarded up or covered with plastic.
The gas supply was still off. The ticket clerk asked us to look
upward. The large light fixtures were all hanging loose from
the ceiling, with a gap of three or four inches between the
plaster and the fixtures.
Where to eat was a problem in Roseburg Sunday. Those
cafes and restaurants still open were literally swamped not
only with local residents whose home life has been disrupted
by the disaster, but by the hundreds of curious people who
flocked into the area to take a look at the disaster.
When the earth-shaking explosion struck Roseburg, with
the resulting "mushroom" of smoke, dust and gas, followed
soon by heavy fire, almost everyone thought the city had
been struck by an atom bomb. There was no bomb only
one truckload of dynamite and other explosive material with
an infinitesimal power as compared to an atomic or hydrogen
bomb. Roseburg folk, other Oregonians and citizens through
out the United States are rightly shocked by this local
disaster; they demand investigations, and action to make
sure that such a horror will not happen again. .
Yet Roseburg's disaster' was as nothing when compared
to that which befell the city of Hiroshima in Japan. On that
August day a United States plane flown and manned by
citizens of the United States dropped a bomb on Japan
which brought the same type of disaster as struck Roseburg,
only magnified thousands of times.
Thursday night this writer sat in beautiful, peaceful
Lithia park and heard Suzanne Hanson read from John
Hershey's soul-stirring account of Hiroshima. For the first
time the full significance of what had happened in Hiroshima
dawned on this writer. True, we read the newspaper ac
counts, heard the radio reports and since that time have
been a part of many discussions on the horrors and futilities
of atomic warfare its downright inhumaneness.
Friday morning, with Mrs. Hanson's voice still ringing
in our ears, and with the word pictures which Mr. Hershey
painted still fresh in our mind, we heard about Roseburg.
Yesterday we saw and heard more. Yesterday we heard the
cab driver, the housewife, the business man all saying "some
thing must be done. This must never happen again." Voices
filled with compassion said "how dreadful for the driver of
the truck. His life is ruined. Better that he had died." Or, "I
hope this teaches the men of that firm a lesson. How can they
be so careless when human life is involved?"
Driving home from the United Nations meeting Thurs
day night in the park, there was more talk of Hiroshima, and
bombs, and wars. We were reminded that the Japanese,
while sinned against, have not been without sin when it
comes to slaughtering their fellow men, and that after all,
Hiroshima happened because we were at war, and after all,
war is war. '
Of the Roseburg disaster we say' "it must not happen
again." Of Hiroshima we say "but we were at war." O.S.
evidence of injuries many
occurred and where damage
Valley Woman to
Teach in Germany
Ashland Mrs. Beatrice
Braden, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Louis Werth, and sister
of Mrs. Guy Holman, 2095
Valley View road, will leave
from Brooklyn N. Y., Satur
day, August 15, for Frank
furt, Germny, where she will
tech American children of
Armed Forces Personnel.
Mrs. Braden has been visit
ing in the valley for the past
several weeks, having taught
in the Sandy, Ore. schools.
She is one of 34 teachers se
lected from the three north
western states to teach in
Germany.
. - -
Woman Honored
At Baby Shower
Mrs. Leonard Buchwald Jr.,
Sunnyview lane, was honored
recently by a baby shower at
the home of Mrs. Richard
Wickham, 2569 Sunnyview
lane. Attending were friends
and neighbors of the honored
woman.
They included Mrs. Leonard
Buchwald, Mrs. George Wick
ham, Mrs. Glen Allen, Mrs.
Milford White, Mrs. Dale
Bradley, Mrs. Keneth Buxton,
Mrs. Clarence Santee, Mrs.
Evelyn Lester, Mrs. Jack Web
er, Mrs. Jack Pope, Mrs. Har
vey J. Dutton, Mrs. Thomas
A. Smith, Miss Betty Griskow
ski, Mrs. Robert Ball, Mrs.
Leonard Rhodes, and Mrs.
Richard Loeffler.
Refreshments in the pink
and blue theme were served
by Mrs. Weber and Mrs. Wick
ham. f
Area Residents
Return from Trip
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Wat
kins, 701 West Jackson St.,
returned recently from San
Francisco, whre they attend
ed the graduation xercises
of the French Hospital School
of Nursing.
Friends of the Watkins
were among the class mem
bers. They were Mrs. Jam3s
Stokes, the former Phyllis
Watkins, and Miss Eleanor
Liebbrand, both former Med
ford residents and graduates
of Medford High school. They
received their nursing diplo
mas with Miss Liebbrand re
ceiving the honor award.
Later in the week the Wat
kins were guests at the wed
ding of Miss Liebbrand to
Paul Gf eller of San Francisco.
Mrs. Chester Bourne and
Mrs. J. W. Watkins, both Med
ford, accompanied the Wat
kins south.
Store Managers
Do Not Shop
Washington -UPD- Wives of
supermarket managers say
their husbands don't bring
home the bacon.
They leave grocery shop
ping chores to the distaff side.
And like most husbands, they
rarely have an answer to the
age-old question, "What would
you like for dinner, dear?"
This was disclosed in an
informal survey of family
shopping habits by the Na
tional Association of Food
Chains.
Wives of the nine national
winners of the association's
annual good citizenship
awards for community service
also indicated that their hus
bands were little or no help
in meal preparation.
However, some said their
husbands occasionally tip
them off to good buys in sea
sonal foods and specials. They
felt this helps their families
eat better and more econom
ically than the rest of us.
Like any smart homemak
er, the supermarket mana
ger's wife asks herself four
questions as she makes out
her shopping list:
-Will the family like each
item? Is it nutritious? Is the
price right? Is it in season?
Convenience is also import
ant. One out of the nine wives
said she did not stop at her
husband's store. It is too far
away, she said. Two other
markets in his chain are clos
er home.
Soup Can Label
The label on a soup can
does not tell how many oys
ters are in the stew, but it
does give you clues to the
amount of each ingredient.
They are mentioned in order
of decreasing quantity, with
the largest first and the
smallest last.
Enjoy Yourself .
in SALEM . i
Stay at the beautiful
new Marion Motor Hotel
Hotel or Motel
Guest Accommodations
Comfortable Beds
Heated Swimming Pool
excellent Cuisine
Cocktail Lounge
Friendly Service
-MARION
HOTEL
200 S. Commercial Sofm, Oraga
Fhana EMpif 3-4123
Scandinavian
Offer Variety
By JEANNE LESEM
United Press International
Stockholm-IUPD-Hamlet, the
indecisive Dane, would have
a hard time aboard Caravelle
jetliners due to link 24 Euro
pean and Middle East cities
in May.
The new aircraft, first of
SAS' (Scandinavian Airlines
System) jet fleet, are no place
for a man who can't make up
his mind about food.
When the 515-MPH planes
inaugurate jet service to 17
countries, passengers will be
asked for decisions on meal-
planning almost as soon as
they step aboard. He who hes
itates could go hungry
The complexities of meal
planning for short-and-long-haul
jet passengers were re
vealed in an SAS preview at
Stockholm's Bromma Airport
for 40 food and travel editors
from 10 countries.
The French-made planes
will cut flying time between
some cities to less than an
hour. A different light meal
will be served on each route
leg, airline officials said, and
the menu for the entire flight
will be hanaed to each pas
senger at his boarding point.
Light Meals
If he's going only two stops,
he'll have a choice between
two light meals, pre-cooked
and heated in as little as 20
seconds in electronic ovens.
Should he pause too long in
selecting one dish or the
other, he'll have to take the
second, or nothing.
A long-distance passenger,
on the other hand, will have
a greater selection of main
courses from which to com
pose one or more meals as he
flies from, say, Copenhagen
to Kuwait.
Airline officials expect rap
idly growing jet service to
simplify cuisine aod service,
eliminating much garnishing
and decorating that disting
uish luxury meals on today's
slower piston engine planes.
However, individual recipes
will be anything but plain if
those being tested at the ex
perimental kitchen make the
grade for jet travel.
The simplest of a dozen
dishes sampled were poached
smoked Scandinavian salmon
served , with new potatoes;
and an East-West combina
tion, baked Idaho potato top
ped with butter, a generous
scoop of sour cream, and Rus
sian caviar.
Elaborate Side
On the elaborate sid-i were
breast of ptarmigan stuffed
with forcemeat of ptarmigan,
pork and goose liver pate,
truffles and cognac; pastry
tarts filled with shrimps, mus
sels, lobster and mushrooms
in a wine sauce; a pate of
pheasant, veal, pork and cog
nac: and brioches (French
breakfast rolls) filled with
sweetbreads, mushrooms, pate
de foie gras and a rich cream
sauce.
These meals will take hours
of preparation by ground
flight kitchens.
Once cooked, they will be
Mistletoe Club Plans
Picnic Wednesday
Mistletoe club will hold a
picnic luncheon at the home
of Mrs. Dave Fraysher, 2035
Sunset drive, Wednesday, Au
gust 12, at noon. Those plan
ning to attend are to take
their own table service and
a covered dish.
Committee in charge of the
event includes Mrs. Delbert
Ross, Mrs. Irvin Patten, and
Mrs. Tom Mee.
Child's Dish
A compartmented child's
dish, designed like a clown's
face, comes in pink, blue,
yellow and white plastic. If
the circus motif doesn't re
tard a child's clowning at
mealtime, you can point to
the similarity of the dish and
an airline tray and play a
game of "let's pretend we're
dining above the clouds."
The extra-protein bread
...for healthy youngsters
...and figurewise mothers .
special formula HOLLYWOOD D ft BAD
And it's delicious! Oven-fresh
outlike sesame flavor with high
nutrition for weight watchers and busy
youngsters. Ita Special
Formula contains Vitamin Bi,
and minerals, including
Iron, from 16 sun-ripened
vegetables and grains.
FREE: ,
Hollywood Calorie
Counter and Menu
Planner Write:
Eleanor Day,
100 W. Monroe St,
Chicago 3, Illinois,
uept.it
Raked by
FLUHRER'S BAKERY
Una Licwi ay National Bakart Sarvicaa, toe.
C196B b National BakanSanicas, Inc.
rr.
a r '1 a 1
1 I 1 1
Urr rVl m?
Airlines to
in Meals
put aboard in coldboxes to be
held until mealtime, often a
matter of minutes after take
off. Time and motion studies
are being made to determine
the fastest way to prepare
and serve meals aloft, espe
cially on short flights with
large passenger loads.
Family Blues
Helped by Home
Lincoln, Neb.-(1IPD-Marriage
and the family are like a
first aid kit-ready to give
emergency treatment to emo
tional scratches and bruises
of family members.
That's the view of Dr. J.
Joel Moss, professor of family
relations at the University of
Nebraska.
He said that bad moods,
irritations, the "blues"-things
which trouble any family
member-put special pressures
upon other members of a fam
ily to help the individual so
he becomes "livable" again.
He said emotional tensions
of individuals often become
so great that they demand
release. Thef family is chal
lenged to provide for release
of these feelings through ways
which will not change an in
dividual's relationships with
others.
Different persons find dif
ferent ways of ridding them
selves of tensions, Moss said.
"Some need to blow up and
get the matter off their chests.
Many use music, sports,
movies or other activities as
emotional releases. Some peo
ple need to talk out their prob
lem, explain their actions and
confess wrong doing."
Moss said the family can
provide support and assurance
for its members in several dif
ferent ways. He said some
individuals feel guilty and
need to have these feelings
relieved. In this case they
need reassurance that they
still think objectively and are
capable of solving their own
problems-even though they
have made mistakes.
"In some cases, face-saving
devices are needed." Moss
continued. "This may call for
some covering up on the part
of other family members or
helping the person find rea
sonable excuses for their ac
tions." Colonial Custard
For a real colonial flavor
use molasses in place of sugar
in baked or boiled custard. V4
cupof unsulphured molasses,
2 cups of milk, 3 eggs, Vi tea
spoon of salt and 1 teaspoon
of vanilla is a good basic re
cipe. The secret for a smooth,
velvety textured custard is
controlled heat. The automat
ic top burner heat control on
the new gas ranges will make
steamed and boiled custards
to perfection. If you like the
baked custard texture, place
the custard cups on a rack in
a pan of water. Set the dial
at 212 degrees and cover the
pan. The steam will cook the
custards in 20 to 30 minutes
Chilled Soup
Whip them up in just a few
minutes early in the day-refrigerate
and chill until sup
pertime. The delicious differ
ence of the chilled soups of
summer will raise cheers from
hungry souls, revive heat-limp
appetites. Try one of the
canned condensed cream
soups; blend thoroughly with
a soup can of milk. Or try
canned condensed black bean
or tomato soup blended with
water; float a fluff of sour
cream on top. For super-special
effect, serve in stemmed
goblets.
Safe and Pure
Glass bottles and jars have
traditionally been used for
drugs and medicines because
of the demand for protection
which glass alone affords -in
a field where the highest
standards of safety and pur
ity must be maintained.
X SiJ? '' About
a owonti m an
18 gram silo.
Up to 48
xtrm protein
CMcaaa
W
iillllB
Eagles Auxiliary
To Meet Thursday
The auxiliary to the Fra
ternal Order of Eagles will
meet Thursday, August 13. at
8 p.m. at the Eagles Hall. The
office of treasurer will be
filled for the unexpired term.
Mrs. Yetta A. Flowers and
Miss Gladys Rammin are on
the entertainment committee.
The Past Presidents club
of the Fraternal Order of
Eagles will meet Friday, Aug
ust 14 at the home of Mrs.
Lyle Pickell, 823 Broad st.,
at 1:30 p.m.
Clothing Tells
Kind of Person
Wearer Is
By DON LOPER '
The girl who drops her
clothes carelessly on the floor
proves that she has messy
habits, a messy mind and in-
consideration for others.
A person's clothes always
tell what kind of person she
is. If dresses show spots, or
needs pressing, she is obvi
ously advertising the fact that
she is dirty both inside and
out.
Start clothes hygiene hab
its early, and never vary from
them. Don't wear a favorite
dress just once more, al
though you know that' It
needs cleaning.
Clothes won't take care of
themselves. Learn how to
launder underclothes and
hose, and then master the art
of ironing. Don't ever wear
underclothes twice without
laundering and pressing.
Air Dresses
Always air dresses at least
overnight, and don't cram it
into a closet where it becomes
wrinkled. Proper storing of a
garment can add several years
to its life.
Check your entire ward
robe regularly. Replace lost
buttons, make necessary mi
nor repairs, strengthen out
sagging hems and see that all
lingerie is placed neatly in
drawers.
At least several times a
year, air your entire wardrobe
preferably in a shady area, so
that the sun won t fade colors.
Check each item carefully
and don't return anything that
needs cleaning or repairing
However, don't do dry-clean
ing at home, because , even
with the greatest caution, it's
still too dangerous.
You're never too young to
be beautiful, so by the same
token, it's never too soon for
you to being taking pains
with the clothes that help you
accent that beauty.
. 1
Spray-on Starch
A spray -on starch in a
push-button container is for
the homemaker whose family
likes part, but not all, of its
washable clothes starched.
The aerosol starch now is be
ing test-marketed in New
England states. It can be used
on either damp or dry
clothes, according to the mak
er, and works best with a
steam iron.
Learning To Sit
Is A Blessing!
Liza cam last night to have
supper with ua on the patio.
Meatball Vegetable Skillet is a
., , favorite dish of
is"" t 4 hers, so we
plugged in the
electric frying
, pan out were,
(ZZbfZj and we cooked
i -l. 1 na' at ana v's"
ited all at the
KKfS same time. We
- HI C UUU L BCV JUiAB
.V-J often, o every
pjf minute sbes
nere nil 10
count
a
She brought along her birth
day letter from Cole. It wasn't
a long letter, but was full of a
son s appreciation for his moth
er. He mentioned some of her
special qualities, then added,
"But, Mother, the thing I'm
most grateful for is that you
taught me to sil still!. In my art
work as well as civic and church
activities, I could never stand
the pace without having learned
that there are times you have to
sit still whether you like it or
not.
a a
Liza explained that she had
insisted that the children sit
ouietlv sometime each day and
read or do something with their
hands. Of course, as Liza said.
a mother really never knows
which things will prove most
helpful to her children. And it's
comforting to know she's done
something that has really paid
off.
a a a
I mixed and shaped the meat
balls for supper and rolled them
in flour early this morning, then
keDt them chilled till time to
brown them. I did it only for
convenience (not to help them
hold their shape), for meat balls
made with Morning Milk always
hold together during cooking,
yet they're still wonderfully juicy
and flavorful to eat a real
credit to Morning Milk! 1
Men's Fashions
More Colorful
Rome-rtlPft-If Italian fashion
designers for men have their
way, males are going to be
more colorful than the ladies
in their attire this fall.
One new ensemble exhibit
ed at the Rome collections
bore the name "Crociera a
Miami" (cruise to Miami), and
consisted of a loose-fitting
dark gray jacket, dark blue
trousers and a flame-red waist
coat. This was suggested for
evening wear.
Another number for men
was styled by Angelo Litrico,
who gained fame by outfitting
Soviet premier Nikita Khru
schchev with Italian suits.
Litrico's ensemble was called
"Arrivederci Mosca" (Goodby
Moscow) and consisted of a
camel-colored suit for spring,
with a light overcoat adorned
with Persian collar of ma-roon-hued
lamb's wool.
Litrico' also showed what he
called a pair of Russian-styled
pajamas. They were fawn col
ored, with short-legged, stove
pipe trousers, a jacket gath
ered at the waist, and a tunic
style side buttoning, with high
collar.
For the space-traveler, Rome
tailors showed an ensemble
called "Delia terra alia luna"
(From earth to moon). It was
a white and maroon checked
suit with tobacco-colored bor
ders on trouser cuffs and
jacket pockets.
:
Chocolate Orange Topping
Melt one 6-ounce package
of semi-sweet chocolate mor
sels over a low gas flame with
one-third cup of hot water.
Stir in one-third cup of orange
marmalade and that's all you
have to do. This is a flavor
combination that will raise
an eye-brow or two. Serve it
warm or cool over ice cream,
cake, gingerbread, or cream
puffs. Yield is 1 cup.
SET- HAVE All "
EXTRA VACATION;
- ON THE VAY!
See us NOW-even if
fou're going NEXT SPRING!
aaaa Cmm m ia far RK
fully iflwtrat1 Btaratara.
SEE GEORGE LEWIS
ROGUE TRAVEL
SERVICE
We Reserve and Sell Airline
and Sfeamthip Tickets
PHONE SP 2-6779
111 E. 8th
Still
MEATBALL-VEGETABLE
SKILLET
(Makes 4 servings)
Yt cup fine, dry bread crumbs
Yl cup undiluted
MORNING MILK
1 pound ground beef
1 teaspoon salt
Dash pepper
Yt teaspoon nutmeg
2 tablespoons grated onion
2 tablespoons flour
2 tablespoons shortening
2 cups thinly sliced raw
potatoes
1 lOVi-ounce package
frozen peas
4 carrots, cut in quarters
4 to 8 small white onions
1 cup water
Vi teaspoon salt
JLJasb pepper
Soak bread crumbs in Morn
ing Milk. Combine ground beef,
1 teaspoon salt, pepper, nutmeg,
onion and Morning Milk mix
ture; mix thoroughly. Divide
meat mixture into 12 portions
and shape into balls. Roll meat
balls in flour to coat Melt short
ening in electric frying pan. Add
meatballs anrJ brown on all
sides. Add vegetables and water.
Sprinkle with Vi teaspoon salt
and pepper to taste. Cover tight
ly. Turn electric f ryine pan to
low heat Cook until vegetables
are tender, about 30 minutes.
Serve immediately.
the
: Healthy Baby
milk!
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