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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 25, 1960)
YOU CAN DRAW THIS! Here's whot arlitt-educalor ANN DAVIDOW lays about her book, "let' Draw Animals" "Let's! Let's find out together that it's simple to draw in steps even more fun if the steps are also tricks, set to rhyme. So let's!" Order this big bookful of fun fur your children ... or for a unique gift It contains 80 of the bright "Let's Draw Animnls" features our young FAMILY WEEKLY readers enjoy each week, with all new drawings and rhymes. Yours for only $1.00 postpaid with paper cover; deluxe edition $2.50 in handsome, long-wearing binding of quality Library Cloth. Hours of fun and complete satisfaction guaranteed, or return book for full refund. To: FAMILY WEEKLY BOOKS 153 No. MUhlgon Ave. I l-iLrdrrr? 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A doctor's formula, liquid Zemo has this effective 3 -way action; also keeps skin looking cleaner! Get liquid Zemo, Ointment, too. In regular and extra strength. To nave buy the large sizes of Zemo. QUEEN. EAMI The child she is expecting, if a son, will be heir to the throne of Persia; but whatever the future holds, she talks about it with confidence and deep love for her husband, the Shah By FREDERICK SANDS Six months after her fairy-tale marriage to the Shah of Iran, Queen Farah sat with me in the Royal Palace at Teheran and spoke about her new life as Queen of the ancient land of Persia, and of how she is looking forward to becoming a mother. The once-carefree art student, who met the Shah last year, expects her child in October ten months after her Arabian Nights marriage to the "King of Kings." Sitting with me in the palace that is the royal town residence, 21-year-old Farah talked to me of her new lifer- "At times it gets so lonely for me that I feel like a bird in a cage," she said. "Unlike other women, I cannot go out whenever I want to. Sometimes I think of my carefree student days. But never for long. "I was told in advance what my special duties would be. My mother, my uncles, and my friends told me it would not be an easy life. They warned me that duty would always come first." An active sportswoman before her mar riage, Farah has been ordered by her doctors to avoid any strenuous activity, in cluding travel. Recently, when the Shah took a trip to Europe on state business, Farah wanted desperately to go along but was forced to remain behind. "I had so much looked forward to going with him," she told me sadly. "And, oh, how I missed him while he was away!" To pass her months of pregnancy, Farah has taken up painting. "Let me show you my studio," she said, getting up suddenly Family Weekly, September 25, 1960 and leading me through a small door off the palace's main hall. We climbed a cheaply carpeted, narrow staircase which brought us to a simply furnished sitting room devoid of all luxury. "This is where I come if I want "to be completely alone," the Queen explained. Another short flight of stairs, and we were in her studio, a window-lined attic over looking the roof tops of Teheran. It has a plain wooden desk in one corner, a settee in another, and two easels in the center of the room. Stacked up in racks among art books are hundreds of sketches and drawings each signed F. Diba, her maiden name done during her student days in Paris. There is nothing in these rooms to remind her of palace life. It is the only place where Farah can forget that she is a queen. She lifted a small canvas from its easel and held it up for me to see. "I have just begun to paint in oils, but what a mess I make of myself!" she said. "Have you already decided on a name for your child, either for a boy or a girl?" I asked. "This will follow a centuries-old custom," she explained, "whereby nothing is decided until the child is born. Then, according to its sex, a number of likely names are writ ten on separate pieces of paper and placed between the pages of the Koran (the Moslem Bible). "On the sixth day, after ceremonial prayers that the choice shall be the will of