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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 6, 1960)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORE. WEDNESDAY. JULY 6, 1060 A Three Popular Vegetables Called Immature Flowers By JEANNE LESEM United Preit International New York (UPD - Flowers are table decoration and But don't start nibbling at the center piece yet. The West em Growers a s s o elation of Los Ange les said three of our favorite v e g etablcs c a u liflower, artichoke and Jeanne Lesen) broccoli are really immature flowers. If cauliflower, a member of the cabbage family, isn't picked soon enough, each lit- Japanese Girls Are Dyeing Hair By CHARLES R. SMITH United Press International ' : Tokyo - (UPD - Thousands of "Japanese girls are dyeing to . look westernized. They're changing the color of their hair from black to various shades of red and sometimes, of all things, blonde. The men generally don't approve of the new trend in beauty, but like it or not, the lighter tones seem to stay and increase. One of Japan's leading beauticians predicts that soon the black -haired Japanese girl will be as diffi cult to find as a red-haired one would have been a few years ago. , "In another decade." said hed-haired Miss Maya Katao- ka, "all the Japanese women will have red, brown or blonde hair, and the black will almost disappear." - Why? Western Look Well, explained Miss Kata oka, it's all part of the Japa nese woman's effort to look more like her western sister. It goes hand in hand with wearing falsies and plastic surgery to raise the nose and round the eyes Miss Kataoka and other beauty "experts" agreed. "I'm one hundred per cent for the trend," said Miss Ka ttaoka, "and almost everyone . else is, too. "Only the men oppose it." "Women should wear what ever color of hair they wish," she explained. "This is one of the freedoms the Japanese women should have." If the men want someone to blame for the red heads popping up all over Japan, they can take it out on the movie actresses and models. The movie actresses and models began changing color because lighter shades gave them a "softer" effect before the cameras. - Officials at one of Japan's leading movie studios said "practically all of the movie actresses now bleach and tint their hair." A spokesman for the Tokyo Model club said all of its 300 registered models sport red- tinted hair-dos Once the stars and models ' set the pace, the younger set , followed suit. 1 No Meetings The Southern Oregon Mush- - room club will not hold meet- Ings during the months of .July and August, but will re sume meetings in September, ' according to club officials. - - 4 : The highlight in fashions for infants has a domestic flavor-Alaskan, that is. The . little ones will be sporting hooded car coats of while pile, lined with sateen. These are trimmed at the shoulders with pastel and white braid, giving .babies the Eskimo look. your dollars have a I.Q. HOMI Tdt United Stales Nellenel lenlc el rerllansl both food. Be sure OfeS high I.Q. yXAS add to your f)fc) Savings Account f J by JULY 9 I ' tint$rest V- Earn Interest from 1 . . ; Hp tie bud blossoms into delicate flowers, the association ex plained. But a globe artichoke is "perhaps the most spectacu lar edible flower bud," the association added. For eating, it is picked green. Left un harvested, the inedible heart of the plant - the choke -emerges from the cup of leaves and unfurls into a deep blue to metallic purple-tinged flower. The Jerusalem artichoke, more rarely seen, is neither an artichoke nor from the Holy Land, the association added. It's a tuberous root of the sunflower plant with an artichoke flavor. Broccoli is also an unripe flower, an old-timer in Europe but relatively new to most of America. Thomas Jefferson is said to have brought it back from France for his garden at Monticello, but its popu larity here was limited pretty much to the Boston and New York areas until the 1920s. Left to see, broccoli plants produce pretty yellow blos soms. Edible Botes One of the world's most decorative and fragrant flow ers - the rose - also makes good eating at two stages of development. Both petals and hips (tiny berries remaining after the blossoms wilt) have been used in European and Middle Eastern cookery for centuries. Rose petal jam and rose hip soup are two of the most pop ular dishes. In Rose Recipes (Red Rose Publications, Wood stock, Vermont), Jean Gordon reported that a dinner host to Nero entertained the Ro- m.an emperor with rose pud- ding and rose wine, filled his fountains with rose water and placed garlands of roses on the guests' heads and wreaths of roses around their necks, But it's in the herb garden that you find edible flowers in greatest abundance. Edible Flowers Brilliantly colored b e 1 1- shaped nasturtium flowers can be used to brighten canapes and salads. Rose geranium petals add color to cakes, custards and puddings. -Star-shaped woodruff flow ers can be used to garnish summer drinks. -Jellies and beverages can be flavored with fragrant, dark purple petals of laven der. -Powdered marigold petals were the poor man s saffron in ancient Rome. The French also use this flower to flavor and color cakes. True saffron is undoubted ly the ranking millionaire of the edible flower family. It's made of the stigmas of purple flowered autumn crocuses, and more than 75,000 hand- picked blossoms are needed to yield one pound of the herb. 1 Wenonah Club Plans Picnic Members of Wenonah club, Degree of Pocahontas will meet Thursday, July 7, at 9:30 a.m. at the home of Mrs. James Wicker to attend a pic nic at the James Grimes ranch, Savage Creek road. Members and their families are invited to attend. Those needing transportation may call Mrs. Charles Susich, MUrdock 2-2692. Those at tending are to take a covered dish and table service. Coffee and rolls will be furnished. New officers will conduct the' afternoon business ses sion. Mrs. Carl Ludwig is the retiring president and Mrs. Henry Dooms the new presi dent. t It is recommended that you keep bacon in your freezer no longer than three months. - OWHIO STATIWIOI U,mt,, r,j.lo,pli i,,0 coiasreilM Child Needs Guidance From Cradle By GAY PAULEY UPI Women's Editor New York-A one woman crime buster puts the blame for juvenile delinquency right at the nearthslne. "No child is born bud, said Mrs. Frank Flynn. "But he needs guidance from the cradle on. It often is too late if the child is in his teens before parents and teachers discover he is a problem. "A parent should recognize that an act of aggression in a tot is not something cute, It is warning sign. And kin dergarten is the place for the school to look for the first signs of delinquency." Rose Flynn, 50, a consult ing psychologist, for 25 years has worked through the class room, the welfare agencies and individual counseling to prevent children from turn ing to crime. She said that only recently she asked, by questtonaire, group of 100 children in fifth and sixth grades what they considered the causes of JL, The 100 were "referrals" - problem children referred to her by parents, teachers and doctors. The majority answers: "Our parents don't care . . . We get no love and attention . They want us out of the house . . . we get lonesome. Many protested, she added that "our parents send us to camp each summer; we d rather be right at home with them." "I think." said Mrs. Flynn, "that if the family pattern is one of affection and caring, there is far less chance of a child growing up to trouble. But the school and the church also have a lot of helping to do." All of us want respect, want notice, want to be want ed," she said. "The child not getting that recognition often seeks a substitute . . . falls in with a neighborhood gang which he feels gives him status." Mrs. Flynn, who lives in Brooklyn, became interested in crime prevention while teaching in public school. I saw that the three Rs were just the start of a teach er s job," she said. She began giving problem children spe cial attention, inviting them to unfold their troubles to her because she was interested in their welfare.. "I found that almost all came from dissembled homes," she said. Mrs. Flynn estimates that she has given individual coun seling to 1,000 young people. Sociologist Says Cities Are Unfit For Human Living By LeROY POPE United Press International New York-uTPD - The city slum with its dirty vacant lots probably was a better place to raise children than mod ern suburbs and institutional playgrounds, a New York uni versity sociologist claims. Attacking the most sacred beliefs of city planners and modern architects and sociol ogists, Professor Ernest van den Hagg wrote in a recent issue of American Scholar that our cities are becoming unfit for human living be cause of these ideas. He said this is creating a dangerous crisis for North America because the whole world is rapidly becoming ur banized. Modern architects and city planners deliberately destroy the traditions, a soul, the color and vitality of the cities, Pro fessor van den Hagg, said, be cause of a mistaken belief in the importance of functional ism. "To raise slums and rebuild in such a way as to house fewer people is pointless," he said, "the slum is displaced but not eliminated . . . there is more life, and perhaps more communal feeling, in a slum than in many a suburb ... I am not even convinced that an empty lot Is not a better place for children to play than an institutional play ground. It surely fosters in dependence, imagination and spontaneity far more than most playgrounds." Professor van den Hagg said slums don't breed crime any more than hospitals breed death and to Imagine you can reduce crime by slum clear ance is as silly as to believe you could end sickness by closing the hospitals. The new city housing de velopments that replace slums only Increase loneliness, mon otony and diminish the color, variety and vitality of city life, he wrote. . f , Visitors Marine Staff Sgt. and Mrs. William E. Cohee and chil dren, Karen, Randall and Richard, Yuma, Ariz., arrived here Tuesday to visit Mrs. Cohee's father, F. B, Liddell, 712 Newtown street, Medford. Women's News Former County Public Health Nurse Tells of Jugoslavian Kdltor's notft Mill Mary Kllcll Hell, former public health nurse for Jackson county. Is currently touring Kurope. Among (he places she Is visions are refugee camps. In a rereiu letter Miss Hell writes about the roruiees in Herman? By MARY ELLEN BELL Utrecht, Holland - This is a cold, raw, wet day which is good for resting feet and writing letters. It was in Germany that learned about politics and problems from Jugoslavia po- litical refugees. I lieved with these refugees in one of tiie German cities to which many Yugoslavs flee, simply by walking away from their homeland. These people arc walking into Austria and Germany daily, creating great problems for Germany and serious ones for themselves. World Refugee Year This happens to be World Refugee Year and I hear much about it all over Eu rope. I hope something is be ing done at home. too. This is another reason I want to write this letter on my expe rience with people who are refugees because of CommU' nism. When promising, intelli gent, thinking and liberty- loving young people (and older ones) decide to leave the known for the unknown, to leave the tried for the un tried, to leave a degree of dic tated security for possibly no security, but a real chance for freedom, to leave home, family, country and the close physical contact with them forever, then surely this could be called "the hour of great decision." In my opinion there are two groups of refugees. 1 11 be dealing with only one group for I did not have the heart to go among the others. There is the group of refugees who were displaced because o conditions in Russia after the revolution; along with these were the refugees who were displaced due to the Hitler- Nazi philosophy and aggres sion. Demoralised There are a great number in this group. They are the de moralized ones, now anemic and weak as to initiative, the efforts of taking on a new life seems an effort beyond their ability and strength, to make a great final effort. They are pretty hopeless and certainly helpless. Many of them live or have lived in the cheap poorly built barracks thrown up hurriedly for mili tary barracks by Hitler. These barracks simply have to go yet I was told by a senior officer of refugee work that many of these people, when advised they can go into new, better living quarters, (now being gradually built to re place the rattling barracks) that they do not want to leave their horrible living quarters, for these are the only homes they have known for many years. They are thoroughly demoralized by what they have been through. Many of these people are simply lost to a better life. They will always have to be cared for. They are the social indigent ones as it were. World society in all its trou bled mess of war, aggression and nationalism, and hatred have made them what they are. Now, poor souls, they must forever feed on the crumbs of that society, whol ly dependent and quite hope less. Walking Out Then, there is the other group of those coming out now - daily walking out from a Communist World into the Free World - and with noth ing but the desire for free dom, a chance for a better life. When they come out they have to go to a refugee camp where they declare them selves "political refugees." They have to remain there for months, usually 7 to 14, or un til they can obtain an "inter national passport" proclaim ing them to be without a country. It is really a shattering ex perience to live with people who have no country, no pros pect of having one without ceaseless striving and endless patience and almost hopeless waiting and constant effort. A country must open up for entrance and in most of these, once they get In, the refugees must live 10 years before cit izenship can be started. Even the children born to these couples In Germany or Aus tria do not take on citizen ship of those countries, but again are classed In the class of homeless ones, under the international passport class of the parents. Good Citizens But what are these refu gees like? Will they make good citizens?. Yes - most of them will, I think, but they are people, human beings With the good and bad, the strong and the weak as is In Political Refugees in Germany all of us. But all I met would be assets to a country. For instance, there Is Ther esa, who "came out" at 21 She was suffocated by "the pressures" of Communism She had heard of a camp near Hamburg. After the usual declaration as a "political ref ugee" she requested papers as an emigre, these papers took 4 to 6 extra weeks, She borrowed $200 from a refugee agency and finally landed in Chicago at 20 de grees below zero, with 45 cents in her pocket and three words of English. She again borrowed $100 from some of her own nationals and found a tiny room and finally a job in a shoe factory. In a month's time she discovered she could train as a laboratory techni cian at Northwestern Univer sity from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m., but at almost no wages. To sup plement this money she scrubbed floors from 5 p.m to midnight. Later on she had an opportunity to be a wait ress. She decided on Stauf- fer's as the best for tips since she could also have training there and thus be prepared to do waitress work in the very best places. There in the evenings and night she earn ed $20 daily in tips and wages. Wants to be Dentist She always wanted to be a dentist, so after paying off the $300 she began to save every penny. Dentistry and its cost in U.S.A. were impos sible so she returned to Ger many to study dentistry, But what country docs she love? Where are her friends? Where does she want to spend her life? In the U.S.A. She has no friends in Germany. Germany is so full of refu gees that they are not very welcome. Theresa is young, yearns for companship and the friendliness of the Amer icans. Her struggle now is to make herself stay in Germany for dental studies against re turning to the U.S.A. where she can be a waitress or a lab oratory technician. Theresa's Background Her background? Her fath er s farm had been in the family for hundrers of years irom eldest son to eldest son. It was taken by the Com munists. Her family, to live and work, "have to belong to tne party." She would not and walked out. One says in America we nave no ideas of the pres sures of the Communist party on the individual. They are pressured and forced into end less meetings. If you are a student you are first forced to be a Communist; your study or ability or profession doesn't count and is only sec ondary. There is no work, but for the state, and no future. No freedom, no thinking, no contact with the outside world. So many of these young people are willing to risk all for even the chance of freedom. Then there is Boban. whose father, through his own abil ity and initiative, built up a factory for manufacturing tools then other factories. These provided much work for many men. But he was "a capitalist." So the sudden knock on the door, the de mands of surly voices. The parents and two children went to the door-the father was roughly taken away, killed; the body was not even re turned, nor any knowledge of its disposal. Property Taken When he was taken away, the door was locked. The fam ily mother and little boy and girl not allowed to re-enter the house for a single posses sion. The home, all property, the factories were appropri ated by the state. The mother and children put to work at breaking rocks. Later as a young man, Bo ban yearned to be a dentist. He tried to sit in classes, but refusing to Join "the party" Which killed his father, he had no chance and was look ed on as an enemy. He "walk ed out" with his fiancee. That young man is in his last months of dentistry and Is the joy of the World Council of Churches and his university professors. And Lepa, his wife? Her brother was an anti-Communist, so with 15,000 other men was shot without trial because his beliefs and thoughts were not Communistic. Because of this "crime," the family prop erty and possessions wore all confiscated. Even the rose garden at the home was de stroyed in hatred. Her mother loved roses and had a garden of 150 roses. These were either uprooted or broken off In full bloom, Low Wages The oldest son In this fam ily, a brillinn man and do ing an important Job, cannot and will not Join the party so his wages are $30 a month. He can't get out as yet per haps someday. Then there whs tho uni versity professor. Ho had been nn outstanding professor in his Communist country. He learned that his uiiiiie was on the list for liquidation. This was in the beginning of Com munism. He simply fled and finally got to Switzerland. This meant leaving wife and child, a no mean decision to make. His wife and daugh ter had a tragic and terrible time for they could get no help from the state, of course, and lived as best they could. I met all of this family. They are cultured, charming, wonderful people. The father is now a professor In a lend ing European university. But think of the forced separation of this family. The daughter, now a high school senior and with plans for study of medicine, said no one would ever know the difficulties of separation, or even of re-union. She could Just remember her father Then when 17 years old to be reunited and to live intimate ly in family life, after almost 13 years, with a total strang er had been very dlflcult for her. Hungarian Nationalism I could go on and on and write of others of the Hun garians whose nationalism and love of country is so strong and deep as to be al most a sickness. The Hun garian refugees take comfort in remaining in Vienna where they can feel they ore near home and can hear the Buda pest radio. I was told that of II the refugees, the Hun garians are "the most diffi cult" because their love of country is so intense. Think then what It has meant for them to decide to leave their country I was told by a refugee expert; who was In Hun gary during the rcvoluntlon that it was really a "revolu tion of chlldren"r-not adults. A revolution of children who had never known freedom, but who had learned of it from the lips of their parents and were willing to die for it. The adults in great number did not participate in the fighting "it was really tho children." He said that the Hungarian peasants are a careful, knowing Int. They did not participate actively, but they brought everything they had to Budapest and the fighting centers, 'There never was so much food all free in Budapest in all its history as during the revolution." Communist Spies And what of the condemna tion of our U-2? Well, in s small city of Germany I stay ed with a friend who belongs to one of Germany's very Im portant lauded and titled fam ilies. There I was told (as I was in another big city) that Wes tern Germany knows of at least 16,000 working out and out Communist spies. These are infiltrated everywhere. How many more non-trained and non-registered spies the Germans have no idea The son of one of the branches of this family went into Eastern Germany to sec his fiancee. He was taken into custody and questioned. In the procedure he was told by the Communists that they knew everything about his family, even gave the car licenses of the two family cars. One of the workers on the estate had been planted there for infor mation. After he left his fi ancee said the authorities had been approaching her at fur qucnt intervals to train for spy work. My friend said, "I have no doubt that they even know the names of my two beloved little dogs.'" She had been told by an ex-worker on one of their cx-cslntcs In Eastern Germany that she was not to talk to him or greet him on the street. This he felt was better for her and for him as his mother was In Eastern Germany and actions against her could be used as a threat to pressure him to give Infor mation about my friend Bnd her family. Intense Hatred My friend snys she feels that If East-West Germany are ever re-unlted that there will be a revolution between the two sections. "Tho Com munists have so succeeded with many of the East Ger You Owe Yourself ONE Luxury Easy Ironing Try an IRONRITE, Just $2.50 a week With Complete Instruction CROSIER APPLIANCE 6th & Front Social Events mans that they hnvo created In them nn Intense hut rod so Intense thut they ma ready und engor to fight and kill and confiscate the property of those who have." She says that what goes on In East Germany now goes on at the will of tho Com nuinlst Germans, "who aro al most worse thnn tho Russ- iuns." I feel Hint wo have much to think about. We hnvo a ter rific challenge nt no time in history hns life and living been so serious. Aro we equal to meeting and doing some thing about the International situation? We hnd better be. We had better be willing to do less along tho lines of pleasure and recrcntlon and ensy living and be willing and ready for some sacrifice. It isn't a question of wall to-wall carpet, possessions of cars and boats nnd gadgets that should be occupying our minds and interests. Great Respect At any rate my experiences with the refugees has given me a great respect for them and their courage and their efforts, sacrifices for freedom. At the same time the causes which have mnde them refu gees, disturbs me greatly and deeply. Really their problem is our problem too for It Is what has turned our world upside-down. World condi tions and happenings have plnced us first in position against the threat to the world can we, will we see it through? I think it all depends on us as Individuals and concerted action on our part can do something. It isn't pleasant thought, but we can't be ostriches and bury our heads In Ignorance. Wo had better put our heads, hands and hearts to work in knowing and doing what we are asked mny be asked to do. "No man Is an island unto himself." Mayfields Back From Park Visit Dr. and Mrs. Leonard May field. 1 Black Oak drive Medford, returned home last week end after a week-long camping and fishing trip to Yellowstone National park. The Mayfields, nlong with their 17 -year -old daughter Karen, and 14-year-old son Mike, drove through the Teton Mountain range in northwestern Wyoming. The family reported that they es pecially like the Grand Teton, the highest mountain In the set. Mrs. Mayficld said that the family camped along the way and in Yellowstone. Family Home From Vacation Mr. and Mrs. Wendell D. Mattson, 1036 Mt. Pitt ave nue. Medford, recently ar rived home from a three-week trip to Minnesota and Canada The Mattson family, which includes daughters Linda and Loric, visited friends in both East Grand Forks and Badger, Minn., before traveling to Al berta and Saskatchewan, Can ada. They camped in the kootcnay National park and did sightseeing In the Banff- Lake Louise areas. On the return trip, the lo cal residents viewed the Wa ter show at Bend, Ore. Visit Coast Mr. and Mrs. Stcphan R. Rogers, 2140 Skyvicw drive, Medford, spent a week with their children on the Oregon coast recently. With their children, Slcvie 5, and Diane 4, the Rogers family camped at the Jessie M. Honcyman state park near Florence and viewed other sights along the coast line. Tho travelers arrived home Sunday. Family Returns Highlighting a week - long vacation for Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Loftier, 101 Chestnut street, Medford, was a trip to Reno, Nov., nnd the Califor nia const line. Along with their children, Karen and Clnrcncc, tho couple visited Squnw valley, Morro bay, and Pismo bench, Phone SP 2-6011 House Buyers Adjust Their Dreams to Economic Realities By MARGUERITE DAVIS United Proas Intemnllonnl Chicago -IIII'D- Tho uvortigu hoiiiu buyer's dream house has u deluxe bathroom with n built-in dressing table and mirrored wnlls nnd u kitchen equipped with the nuwo.it labor-saving devices. But, housing niilhorltlos nnd builders ngi'eod, must couples enstly adjust their dreams tu economic realities. The com promise offers far mine value for the money thnn did new homes of 10 to IS yviirs ago, mm Id Jnmes C. Morcliiud, direc tor of the Kedernl Housing Authority offlcu hero. Tho average home Is n brick veneer nnd frame building, with three bedrooms nnd one-und-ii-hulf biithruoiiis. It Is u spilt level or ranch type, set in a yard wider und shallower thnn IS yenrs ugo. It hns nt least 50 per cent more, closet spnee, Morelnud snld, nnd considerably larger bedrooms. Morelmul, u home builder since 1010 until he took his present position five yenrs ngo, snld builders used to figure on 120 sqiinro feet for tile lynsler bedroom. Now ho snld. runt figure Is the min imum for nny bedroom. Most new homes liuvo a "family roum" in the bu.se ment und butter use of space which always hns been availa ble. The kitchen hns prog ressed from a minimum uf cabinet space to built-in cabi nets, refrigerators, und ovens, and double sinks. Major Appliances Murelnnd said most moder ately-priced homes include re frigerators und stoves in the purchase price, nnd ona nt $17,500 also provided a wash ing machine und dryer. Tho living dining room which wns wldcsprcud Immed iately after World Wnr II is giving way to specific "dining a rem," usunlly the short leg of nn L-shnped living room. Separate dining rooms sel dom aro found In homes sell ing for less than $33,000. Better construction mater ials nlso ndd up to a more comfortable home, Murelnnd snld. Insulation, rarely found 2S years ago, now Is common place, he said. Thermopane windows provide added com fort, and the average home can be equipped for air-conditioning during construction for $1,200 to $1,800 additional cost. Bathroom fixtures arc hand somer and moro efficient. Bathroom and kitchen walls arc papered with waterproof material, easier to clean and more pleasing to the cyo. Plas tic tiles allow grcntcr variety In design and color. Improved Lighting Lighting lias been Im proved, said James L. Smith, chief underwriter for the FHA Chicago office. An equal amount of candle power Is provided with less heat. The MAU.A-WAY'S WHITE nd SCRATCHES VANISH Now you can buy the same mngio MAR-A-WAY tli.it professionals use lo restore fine wood finishes llud linve heen scralchcd, marked or marred. Just rul) on -wipe it ofT! MAR-A-WAY comes in walnut, mahogany, maple or neutral shades. Kit includes applicator puds. Safe permanent economical. MAR-A-WAY Available at click of n light switch being turned on has been replaced by the silent mercury switch, cut In price In recent year from iiiine Hum $4 in less thnn 110 cents, llai'd-tii-clean frills uru miss lug In modern homes. UulldoiH uppluml the (ll.mppcnriinco of Hie onec omnipresent picture window, "II used to be you luirdly could sell n house without a plclure window, even if It overlooked the buck alley," snld Hurry I), Curler, chief urchltcct In the Chicago Kit A office. "People are more In ti'lllgent about that now.". Square Dance Clubs Annuonce Dance Schedule The Rogue Vnlluy Cullers ussiiclntlon will hold a meet ing Thursday night nt the Hellvlew Grunge hull, Asn lunil. The meeting starts nt 8 p.m. Duncers lire welcome to attend nnd coffee will be served by the association. The Pioneers Sqiinro Dimes club will not bo holding; dances during the months of July and August but will re sume dancing rt-gularly aguin in September. The Applcgutcrs club will hold n dunce Suturduy, July II. lit the Provoll Grungo hall. There will also be a buslneal meeting. Hound dnnclng will start at 7:I5 p.m. nnd square dnnclng nt B .'IO p.m. Politick refreshments will be served. Stamp Club Plans Meeting The Southern Oregon Slump club will meet at the Girls Community club, Thurs day, July 7, nt 8 p.m. Clyde Smith will apenk on the postage stumps of the Philippine Islands. Refresh mcnts will be served, und anyone Interested In the hobby of stamp collect ing Is Invited to attend. Calendar Calendar notices and newt for the society socllon of The Melt Trlhtino must lie submitted In writing enil deadline for the Sun day edition Is I p m rnday Dead, line for the weekly ralendar Is 9 it m, of tho day of publication and for week day news Is S pm. the day before publication. Wedneidayi 8 p.m. - Cnthollc Daugh ters of America, home of Mrs. Ernest 1. Flakus, 012 J St. 7:30 p.m. - Order of Rnln bow, Masonic hall, Jackson ville. 8 p.m. - Veterans of World Wnr I, barracks and auxili ary, Girls Community club. Thursday! 11:1.1 p.m. - Christian Busi ness nnd Professional Women, Rogue Valley Country club. MAGIC MAKES '1A RINGS 7! Household hit-only SI. 69 Vrnjimmmd l-il, tiiatBSO feZ. j Mar-a-Wav mahooany UlCMlliri IN HOMfWAfflll -w eeMBKsaBassneaOaealtfl