Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 06, 1960, Image 10

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    1A MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or.
" Wednesday, Jan. 6, 1960
Three Dances
Announced
Three square dances are
scheduled for Saturday, Jan
uary 9.
One will be given at Cen
tral Point in the American
Legion hall. It is sponsored
by the Pioneers, and Kenneth
Hood will be caller. The sec
ond will be given at Provolt
in the Grange hall by the
Applegaters, and Byron
(Buzz) Dibble will call. Anoth
er is scheduled for the Butte
Falls Community hall and
will have Douglas Decker as
caller.
These dances will all begin
at 8:30 p.m. and dancers at
tending are to take potluck
food for supper
Rogue Valley ' Callers' as
sociation will meet Thursday,
January 7. at 8 p.m. at the
home of Robert Glather, 61
Vashti way. Dancers are wel
come to attend these meetings
if they are interested.
The class for beginners be
ing held by Mr. Decker at
Carpenters' hall is open for
one: more night. The class
meets Thursdays beginning at
8 p-m. Additional information
may be obtained by calling
Mr. Decker at NOrmandy
4-1465, or Jake Toews, SPring
3-1087.
Scandinavian Meat
Recipe Uses Spices
For Unusual Flavor
The Scandinavian people
are well known for their love
of well-seasoned food. Unlike
their Italian neighbors, who
prefer the stronger or more
intense spices, the northern
ers prefer a balanced combin
ation of such spices as nut
meg, cinnamon, mace and
cloves.
Even in meat dishes these
spices are used, as in Scan
dinavian Meat Balls. The
meat balls may be served
over hot noodles, or for an
hors d'oeuvre, when the size
should be decreased. They are
.then . served from a chafing
dish.
For the Scandinavian Meat
Balls use 1 pound ground
veal and z pound ground
pork. Vfe cup milk, 1 cup soft
bread crumbs, lV teaspoons
salt, a teaspoon each pepper,
nutmeg and mace, V2 tea
spoon grated lemon rind, 1
egg, beaten, flour, 3 table
srjoons lard or driDDines. 1
can (IOV2 ounces) condensed
mushroom soup, Vz cup milk.
T 1 I A jlJ I
porK, salt, pepper, nutmeg,
inace, lemon rind and egg.
Mix thoroughly. The meat
mixture will be soft. Coat
hands with flour, then shape
into 18 balls, using about 2
tablespoons for each. Brown
neat balls on all sides in lard
er drippings. Pour off drip
pings. Combine mushroom j
soup and Vz cup milk andi
pour over meat balls. Cover
tightly and cook slowly for
45 minutes. Serve hot - over
noodles, if desired. Makes six
servings.
Meeting Announced
For Wenonah Club
Wenonah club of Weatonka
council. Degree of Pocahon
tas, will meet Thursday, Jan
uary 7, at 10 a.m. at the home
of Mrs. Henry Dooms, 156
Van Ness avenue, Ashland. A
covered dish luncheon will be
served at noon, with a busi
ness meeting to follow.
The new officers will as
sume their stations. Mrs. Carl
Ludwig is president of the
club
-
Medford Jaycettes
Plan Session Tonight
Mrs. Charles Jones will
present a program for a meet
ing tonight of Medford Jay
cettes. It will be held at the
home of Mrs. Harold Gard
ner, 3456 Hollywood avenue,
at eight o'clock.
Mrs. Leland A. Carpenter
will be co-hostess.
Save Time
New York -ffiPD- Puddings,
pies and brownies can bake
right along with the main
course of an all-in-one meal.
But don't bake delicate cakes
with other food, for such
cakes are sensitive to the
: . - ct t ,
aLvruu giv en uy several
ioods cooking at once.
What a Grand Feeling
itSf
Lab
eongh comfort. Get
CREOMULSION
FOR CCWGHS, CHEST COIOS, ACUTE BRONCHITIS
Women's News
ill" V :V;- fCS W
Washington Mrs. Perle Mesta, party giver extraordinary
and former diplomat, says her choice of clothing for a social
function is largely determined by the mood she is in at the
moment. Often she makes up her mind just moments before
leaving her chateau-like home or going downstairs to greet
her own guests. And like women all over the world, she
may change her mind and her outfit more than once before
she sets out. Mrs. Mesta likes to match her "important"
cocktail dresses with coats. (UPI Telepholo)
Color Said Potent Tool
To Influence Consumers
By GAY PAULEY
UPI Women's Editor
New York -(LTD- Roses are
red, violets are blue; new
ways with color, are selling
you.
Today's variation of this
doggerel tells in one way how
the experts are using colors
to increase consumer buying
of everything from automo
biles to appliances.
One color authority is How
ard Ketcham, a New Yorker,
who since the early 1930s has
served as consultant to busi
ness and industry.
Consider some ways color
affects our buying, as related
by Ketcham:
YMCA Schedules
Women's Classes
Women's gym, volley ball
and swimming classes are
held each Tuesday and Thurs
day at the YMCA, according
to Mrs. Lanell Wilkes, instruc
tor. The gym classes include ex
ercises for those who wish to
lose extra pounds or inches
gained during the . holiday
season. Mrs. Wilkes said.
Volleyball teams are also
being formed at the Y and a
tournament will be scheduled
in the near future. Swimming
classes are also held at the Y.
Mrs. Wilkes reminded inter
ested persons that the swim
ming pool is heated.
Child care is available for
mothers participating in the
program. The classes are held
at the Y each Tuesday and
Thursday from 10 until noon.
4
FOE Auxiliary
To Hold Party
Mrs Eleanor Pratt is chair
man for a card party which
will be held at the Eagles hall
Friday, January 8, at 12:30
p.m.
The party is one of a series
being sponsored by the drill
team of the auxiliary to
Crater Lake aerie, Fraternal
Order of Eagles.
Meeting Planned
For Hoover PTA
Hoover Parent-Teacher as
sociation will meet Friday,
January 8, at 2:30 p.m. in the
school cafeteria.
Mrs. Richard Knoll, presi
dento f the group, states that
the business meeting will be
followed by an educational
film. Refreshments will be
served.
WHEN YOUR
COUGH
CALMS
D 0 V II
Wonderful! Stops tickle.
Soothes irritation. Promotes
easy breathing. Relaxes. No
narcotics. No antihistamines.
Take Creomulsion for quick
Cotton bags dyed a bril
liant tangerine increased sales
of citrus fruits in bags from
1.250 million to 10 million
in one season;
Shoppers favor apples
that are half-red instead of
those on the green side, but
sales decline when the apples
displayed are all red. Color
contrast whets our appetite;
The Pennsylvania Rail
road served steaks cooked
i.with radar, but patrons sent
them back because they look
ed gray. The railroad modi
fied the cooking apparatus, so
it would sear the outside of
the meat an appetizing brown,
and increase sales.
American Telephone and
Telegraph, within three years
after introduction of colored
telephones styled by Ketch
am, sold 10 million-at an add
ed profit of S10 each over
the traditional black models.
"Ninety per cent of all buy
ing decisions are emotional,"
said Ketcham. in an inter
view at his office, one deep
blue wall, three walls neutral,
one door tangerine. "Since
color appeals directly to the
emotions, it is one of the most
potent selling tools."
"Yet a reaction to color is
personal; it is difficult to gen
eralize on how one shade af
fects all individuals.
"We do know that certain
shades of yellow may connote
cheapness, irritate, us, distress
us. On the positive side, yel
low can cheer, stimulate, in
vigorate, imply luxury.
Where will the color en
gineers take us next?
To making our towns into
a veritable rainbow, said
Ketcham. Ketcham foresees
the day when cities will be
tilled with many-colored sky-scrapers-because
of labora
tory development of new
paints which adhere to metal.
I asked Ketcham whether
this thing of color could be
overdone-as the auto industry
did with mauve and shocking
pink cars.
"Certainly," he said, "there
is the .hazard of hodge podge.
So each city will need a color
arbiter. In the case of the car
industry, there were just too
many people making deci
sions. But I see no reason
why a city, just like a well
dressed woman, shouldn't
have a color scheme."-
Lodge to Hold
Annual Election
The annual election of offi
cers for Fuhat Burkan temple.
Dramatic Order Knights of
Khorassan, will be held Sat
urday, January 9, at 8 p.m.,
in the Pythian building,' Med
ford, the headquarters.
A large attendance of mem
bers is expected in Medford
for the meeting. A program
of entertainment and refresh
ments will follow. The order
of business includes appoint
ment of a new chairman to
head the lodge's humanitar
ian program of aid for spastic
children.
The Far West Dokey
Nomad association conven
tion in Bend in July will also
be discussed.
Grand Emir Emil O. John
son Jr., is program chairman.
Royal Prince Roland G.
Beach heads the nominating
committee.
Party-Giver Extraordinary
Matches Clothing to Moods
By PATRICIA WIGGINS
United Press International
Washington -(CPD- Clothes
are a matter of mood for Mrs.
Perle Mesta, party-giver ex
traordinary and former diplo
mat. Her mood at the moment
determines which suit or
gown she might wear to a
benefit, luncheon, theater
date or dinner party - often
moments before she leaves
her chateau-like home or goes
downstairs to greet her own
guests.
And like women all over
the world, she may change
her mind and her outfit more
than once before she sets out.
For someone who hates to
shop and she "doesn't have
time to shop even if she liked
it" Mrs. Mesta has many se
lections in her closets. Vari
ety is not only a necessity for
the life she leads but also re
flects a fairly unhemmed-in
wardrobe philosophy.
Suits, her favorite day-time
garb, are a variety of colors,
styles and fabrics, showing no
particular devotion to any
one line save for a generally
slim skirt.
Many Styles
Dressy dresses also cover a
range of styles with a partial
ity only to a square-ish neck
line. But the famous original of
"Call Me Madam" is not hap
hazard in selecting or wear
ing clothes. She is one of the
most attractively and fastidi
ously gowned women in
Washington social circles.
She has a favorite design
er who turns out specialities
that suit her and her moods,
usually gay.
And she has a favorite hat
designer, who also keeps her
preferences in mind.
Hats are Mrs. Mesta's "hob
by." Sometimes, she confess
es, she has found a certain hat
so becoming that she has
bought up a heady number of
identical styles at one sitting
Parents Offered
New Information
For Handicapped
Washington, D.C. Parents
of children handicapped by
the absence of an arm or leg
are offered encouragement
and practical information in a
new pamphlet, "The Child
With a Missing Arm or Leg,"
issued today by the Children's
Bureau.
Most of these youngsters
when fitted with today's arti
ficial arms and legs and prop
erly trained, "can become
nearly as independent as oth
er boys and girls," according
to Katherine B. Oettinger,
chief of the bureau.
Scientific and engineering
progress in developing arti
ficial limbs has been going
forward at a very rapid pace
since World War II. Doctors,
engineers, limb makers and
therapists using adaptations
of devices developed for vet
terans, are now able to equip
children with a prosthesis
that lets them make most of
the major motions needed in
everyday life.
The earlier a child is train
ed and fitted to use a pros
thesis, the better. The various
kinds of prosthetic devices
available are described sim
ply. In addition to the adult
sized hand already on the
market for both men and
women, a child's hand is now
being tested prior to being
put in general use.
Because successful fittings
and training for use of arti
ficial limbs requires a num
ber of skills from those of
doctors to social workers,
prosthetists, therapists and
nurses prosthetic teams have
been set up in a number of
clinics over the country by
official state agencies provid
ing services for crippled chil
dren. Children with a missing
limb are eligible for care by
state crippled children's ag
encies which also receive fed
eral grants - in - aid funds
through the Children's Bu
reau. "The Child With a Missing
Arm or Leg" is the eighth in a
series of Children's Bureau
pamphlets for parents of han
dicapped children. It is avail
able from the Superintendent
of Documents, Government
Printing office, Washington,
25, D.C, for 10 cents a copy.
So Who Needs Sleep?
Chicago-(UPD-Mattresses do
just about everything these
days except walk the dog.
One new mattress includes
an electrical heating unit,
good for persons who suffer
from arthritis, rheumatism or
muscular soreness. Another
provides an automatic mas
sage, and a third will waken
the sleeper by easing him to a
sitting position at a specified
time.
Social Events
- varying only the fabric or
incidental touches.
If Mrs. Mesta has to be pin
ned down, her favorite ward
robe colors would be red an
"Italian red" - and beige and
black.
While she varies accessor
ies with the outfit, she fre
quently wears- two favorite
diamond clips, which, she ad
mits, "are very showy" to
dress up a day-time suit or set
off a "pretty mood" dressy
gown.
Mrs. Mesta also has a fav
orite costume habit for af
fairs that call for dressy short
dresses - the most frequently
worn items in Washington
wardrobes. Every "big" cock
tail dress has its own coat in
a matching color or fabric,
giving an "ensemble" trade
mark to the party-giver when
she is a party-goer.
MEDFORD
Prices Slashed Again!
Yes, ladies, this is it! We must clear out all our fall and winter merchandise
NOW! That's why, starting tomorrow, prices have been slashed again. We
still have a good selection of top quality merchandise, but it won't last long
at these low, low prices.
ALL SALES FINAL PLEASE!
Doors Open 9:30 a.m. ... Be Here Early!
SUBTS
Values to $11 0.00 - Values to $69.95
$g88 $gg88
SPORTSWEAR
Capri Pants, Skirts, Sweaters, Blouses, Jackets,
Bermuda Shorts, Terry Cloth Beachwear
$g88
SNIP-IT S
Regular S))48
$3.00
. Value -7
ISRDMIL
Values 88
$18.95 . U
A
Store Hours: 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Your
Main and Bartlett Streets Downtown Medford
January 11 Set
As Wedding Day
The wedding of Miss Mary
Pat Lucy to Ralph Holzapfel
of Shedd. Ore., has been set
for Monday, January 11, at
Sacred Heart Catholic church.
The rites will be read at four
o'clock in the afternoon, and
the reception will be held at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Valton Finley, 1327 Reddy
avenue.
Miss Lucy, who is Jackson
county extension agent for
home economics, is the
daughter of Mrs. C. L. Carter,
Oceanside, Calif. Mrs. Carter
is expected to arrive here
Thursday to be with her
daughter, who makes her
home at 128 South Columbus
avenue.
Miss Lucy works with the
various units of the Jackson
County Home Extension serv
ice, and she has been honored
by a number of these since
the announcement of her en
gagement last fall.
BIRD LORE
New York-(UPD-The domes
tic turkey is the only type
of poultry that has descended
from the wild stocks native
to the United States.
K
Values to $25.00
S88
mWB
Calendar
Calendar notices and news for
the society section of The Mail
Tribune must be submitted in
writing and deadline for the Sun
day edition is 1 p.m. Friday. Dead
line for the weekly calendar is 9
a.m. of the day of publication and
for week day news is 5 p.m. the
day before publication.
Wednesday:
8 p.m.-American Associa
tion of University Women,
with Mrs. Thomas McCamant,
300 Oakwood dr.
8 p.m. - Southern Oregon
Mushroom club, Red Cross
bldg., 60 Hawthorne ave.
8 p.m.-Veterans of World
War I, barracks 540 and aux
iliary, Girls Community club.
Thursday:
1:30 p.m.-Sams Valley La
dies club, home of Mrs. Her
man Priem, Meadows rd.
Meeting Announced
Jacksonville Adarel chap
ter, Order of the Eastern
Star, will hold the first meet
ing of the new year Thurs
day, January 7, at 8 p.m. in
the Jacksonville Masonic
temple.
Mrs. Furman Evernham,
worthy matron, and Donald
Shores, patron, will preside.
J LtlIlI)
Starts Tomorrow . . Burelson's Big
Skoirfts
Values to $19.98
88
S"n 7188
AND
88
TREMENDOUS VALUES!
c
) U J
TAIL
Don't Miss These Bargains!
Regular, $49.98 to
Bras & Girdles
Famous Name
$88
"ire Tt
Lodge Observes i
St. John's Day
Cave Junction - St. John's
day was observed and instal
lation of officers held by
Belt lodge, AF and AM at
the Masonic temple in Kerby.
Dinner was served by the
International Order of Job's
Daughters, De Molay and
Eastern Star members. I
Installed were E. W. Mor
ris, master; C. R. Banks, sen
ior warden: Homer Snyder,
junior warden; George Blue,
senior deacon; Myron Terpen
ing, junior deacon; Karl Pres
ton, senior steward; Wayne
Spencer, junior steward; Rob
ert Breckenridge, chaplain;
Walter Henry, marshal; Free
ling Sawyer, treasurer.
Installing officers were
Earl Spencer, installing mas
ter; D. H. Loyd, marshal;
Doyl Hamilton, chaplain and
Lester Basham, secretary.
Make generous allowances
for shrinkage if you plan to
wash draperies. A fabric
labeled "not to exceed two
per cent residual shrinkage"
should not shrink more than
three-quarters of an inch per
yard.
FINAL
v sv-. r s s
MESSES
Includes wools, crepes, cottons, dressy, casual, en
and two piece styles. Misses, junior and half sizes.
Values to
5788 AND
LEATHER
BAGS
Values
$5)88
COATS
Reg. to $39.98 Reg. to $69.95
88 $5)5)88
3J X
$69.95
SEILTS
1
n Pirk
Charge Account Invited
Phone SP 2-6428
Vanishing Vitamin
Is Kitchen Problem
Kingston. R.I. - (CPD - The
vanishing vitamin is a real
problem in the American
kitchen today, says James
Bromley, University of Rhode
Island consumer education
specialist.
Rnme vitamins are lost
when we discard the water
in which vegetables are
cooked. Heat destroys vita
mins, too. And nutrients of
ten are lost when fruits and
vegetables are not stored
properly.
RmmiM' sueeested these
rules for safeguarding vita
mins: Don't crush or bruise fruits
or vegetables.
Don't soak them in water.
Keep them in the refriger
ator until ready to use.
Use as soon as possible af
ter preparation.
Cook quickly in boiling wa
ter, using as little water as
possible.
Use water in which you
cook vegetables for soups
sauces and gravies.
I
$69.95
BAGS
to $22.95
amd $E88
AND
Plus Tax
Reg. to $149.95
$K88
IT
Wow m