Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 05, 1961, Image 19

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THURSDAY. JANUARY $, 1961
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. ORE.
0
THURSDAY, JANUARY S. 1961 .
HURRY FOR OUR-
Something "extra special" to make for dinner!
FANCY PANTS HAMBURQERS
! ! '
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. MEDFORD MAIL TH&NE, MEDFORD. ORE.
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o w . o" u FtTK n
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'fit: Mt'h . - - o.-fk
4 tgnt wit tRMta
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o
A?Mst bunt mi tm-ft i9
DOG OUTFITTED - Sven Nahlin, flanked by his children,
Christina, left, and Christer, right, shows off the "frog-dog'
outfit he designed for the family pet, a fox terrier. Nahlin,
an instructor at the Stockholm frogman school at Stockholm
Sweden, decided his pooch needed an underwater outfit when
the animal developed the habit of following him into the
water and trying to dive with him. With the aid of the
breathing apparatus the dog has remained submerged with
his master for periods up to 20 minutes. (UPI Telephoto)
Landscape Clinic
Scheduled at OSC
Starting Jan. 12
Corvallls - Trees form the
backbone of most landscape
scenes. And the best way to
use trees in home, city, and
community landscape projects
will be explained at a special
landscape design study course
at Oregon State college Jan.
12 to 14.
Trees can be used to indi
cate the walls and ceilings of
outdoor spaces where people
carry on their outdoor-living
activities, according to Donald
J. Martel, head of the OSC de
partment of landscape archi
tecture and coordinator of the
course.
Trees can do this Job either
as single specimens, or as part
of a complex composition, he
noted.
Some trees are shaped so
they are most useful In form
ing walls, Martel said, while
others have widely-branching
tops that serve best to Indi
cate ceilings. Size, structure,
form, texture, and color of
trees are the main factors In
fluencing their use, he added.
Way To Be Explained
Ways to use trees will be
explained in detail at the spec
ial study course, being spon
sored by the Oregon Feder
ation of Garden clubs, In co
operation with the OSC co
operative extension serv i c a
and department of landscape
architecture. Persons attend
ing the course will also learn
how to prepare planting plans,
clear and grade landscape
sites, and used paved areas,
buildings, and water In land
scape designs.
The course is open to all In
terested persons, regardless of
past training or experience in
gardening o r landscaping,
Martel emphasized. It Is aimed
primarily at garden club mem
bers, nurserymen, city plan
ners, members of park boards,
landscape architects, and oth
ers who plan or design public
or private landscapes, but any
person who attends should be
able to pick up a wealth of
Ideas on ways to Improve
landscaping of their own
home or community.
Fee for the course will be
$10. Enrollment forms and
more Information about the
course can be obtained from
county extension offices, gar
den club chairmen, or the OSC
cooperative extension service,
Corvallis.
Small
Worlds
Around
Us
By
Lynn W.
Welkins
(Refiner & Tribune Syndicate, 1961)
1061)
Modeling Contest
Set at Meeing
A modeling contest will be
held when the executive
boards of the Oregon Cow
Belles and Oregon Cattlemen
meet In Portland Saturday
Jan. 7, It was announced to
day. Winner of the modeling
contest to be held during a
luncheon Saturday will rep
resent the stale at the national
Cattlemen and Cow Belle con
vention In Salt Luke City Jan.
25 to 2B.
Ml models at the Ouillonnl
convention will show leather
garments which will be pro
vided by the American Can-
ncrs Council Inc. Mrs. Annie
Williams, Canyon City, 1!)II
Oregon Cow Belles president,
Is In charge of the state's
modeling contest.
ON HONOR ROLL
Klamath Falls - Students
who arc on the honor roll at
the end of fall term at Oregon
Technical Institute have been
announced by Howard rtowe.
registrar. Among those llMrd
from southern Oregon arc
James McLaln, Grants Pass;
Donald Bogcnoff, Central
Point; Jesse F. Dressier Jr.,
Medford; and Jamci Haupt
maun. Med ford
So Beautiful, So Deadly -The
Water Hyacinth
"So beautiful; so deadly"
sounds like the title' of a mys
tery thriller, yet it aptly ap
plies to a flowering plant. One
that grows in fresh water and
is familiar to everyone who
drives a car in the southeast
ern U. S.
This plant is actually a seri
ous illness; a green sickness;
a plague which is both beauti
ful and dangerous. Man, with
all his cleverness and poison
chemicals has been "hard put
to control or lessen its
strength. It is the water hya
cinth, the "million dollar
weed."
The water hyacinth needs
only a body of fresh water,
the sun, and it actually ex
plodes. When climatic condi
tions are favorable, the "pur
ple flower from South Amer
ica grows with reckless and
senseless abandon. Like a
green plague It spreads Itself
across the surface of fresh
water lakes and ponds. It car
pels and chokes rivers and
ponds.
No Room for Boats
Boat Owners foul the air
with abuse as the propellers
of their boats are clogged.
Navigation on some rivers
will come to a complete stop.
The growth of the water
hyacinth is a chain reaction.
From the pretty little plant a
runner branches out, another
plant springs up from this
shoot until what was a single
plant becomes a cluster. Very
soon the cluster becomes a
small island, which rapidly
grows until it is a floating
mass, or even a continent of
green leaves and lavender
blossoms.
With startling rapidity the
blue waters of a lake disap
pear under a smothering blan
ket. Fish die for want of ox
ygen and sunlight, Wild fowl
can. find no place to ligni;
no open water is left. Rafts
of plants break away and float
to new areas. Rivers carry in
dividual plants to some shel
tered cove. There the plant
awaits the sun and the chance
to grow.
The bulbous alr-fllled leaves
keep the plant afloat; the
dark, dangling roots absorb
nutriments from .the water,
turn them into chlorophyll
and food for t h a growing
plant.
Outward, Onward
Here Is a plant that requires
no fixed abode. Water borne
it rides the currents, is pushed
by the wind, or forced out
ward and onward by the ac-j
lual pressure of growth. As
long as the temperature re
mains right the dividing and
re-dividing knows no limit.
The wotcr hyacinth didn't
sneak Into the U. S. like many
plant tramps from other lands,
it was brought by someone
who thought the purple blos
soms were beautiful. In its
native South America It had
nalural enemies that kept It
under some semblance of con
trol. Her those controls and
checks are absent,
Ksthotkally, the water hy
acinth brings forth a beautiful
bloom, bright lavender prlals,
each flower delicately dolled
with a brilliant yellow cen
ter, but economically it is a
"blooming terror," a malady
of blossoms, a pestilence of
planls, that actually has be
come a "green sickness."
FLIGHT TIME
New York Charles Lind
bergh's famed (light to Paris
in 1027 took 33 hours 39 min
utes. i
O
TT TISSUE JJ Jl;
J Regular 2 rolls 29 X vl--
Sv SAVE 45 (f
r S-100 MB
Hunt's No. 300 can 25(j f
A UOOKy
uei ivionre srjT- 1 cans
No. 303 can L I G PI?
4$i00 ' I I
r $100 uavi ,
8-$100S
$00
$400 3
a
Siskiyou (Freestone) No. 2'j can
Del Monta (Clings) No. 303 can 24Sc
Hunt's (Clings) Buffet can
31c
No; 303 can ,sjC
30c
Siskiyou (Bartletts)
Del Rogue (Fancy Harrietts) No. 303 can
Mission (Sliced)
Church
No. 1 Flats
Fruit Cocktail
Grapefruit Sections
Peaches
Peaches
Peaches
Pears
Pears
Pineapple
Grape Juice
Orange Drink
Apple Juice
Chili
Tuna
r $400
Hoint 14-01. bottle
Cnanhplfi M ? sl00
if UyilWlll sn(J Mm, BflS( Oennison. .0-o. can y jC "
Chicken Raviolis , M5Sc2-$r
Facial Tissue .M..2s85'"- T0
USnnni CttiftrtA . C . $400
vicuna jauiayo ;,;.v.;. . 48c J i
Clam Chowder
Dei Monte Drink
Lots of FREE
PARKING in
our huge lot!
6$l ttlfl HlllA STORE HOURS; Open Every Night
ill . C3i.sU Hr IIV Until 9 P.M., Seven Days a Week!
Tree Top
Nalloy (With Beans)
White Star (Chunk Style)
24-ot. bottle
46-oi. can
24-oz. cans
No. 300 can
Del Monta (Cream Style)
(County Kist (Cream Style) No. 303 can
Salte'see
Pineavppta-.Grapefruir
4i-oi. cans
Asparagus
Pork & Beans
Green Beans
jr - i$oo3 Wax Beans
Diced Beets
Corn
Corn
Corn
33cf""!!!!S5 Hominy
3 Peas
New Potatoes
Sweet Potatoes
Spinach , .
Tomatoes
Tomatoes
West Crest
(All Green Spears). 300 size can
35c 3-$100
25c 5T
35c 4tan,$100
Hunt's No. 2 'a site can
Diamond A Cut 303 can
Diamond A No. 303 can
Diamond A No. 303 can
No. 303 can
Diamond A (Whole Kernel)
No. 303 can
35c 3 -T
25c5-T
21c 0eaM i
5 $400
229c 8$l00
r $400
Zlc J 1
239c6"fl'$r
- L $400
19c v I
Van Camp (White or Golden). 303 can
Walla Walls (Fancy)
No. 303 can
No. 300 can
Royal Prince. 303 can
No. 303 can
27c 5 00 g
(Solid Pack) No. 2' can
229c 8--T0
,,20c 651
227c 8-$1
4 $400
7 $100
233c '" 1
can. 00
29c
$400
1
Tattowall (Standard) No. 303 can
235c6""$1
$100
111P
" it
fy w w
U.S. No. 2
Klamath Russet
BUDGET BUYS IN OUR PRODUCE DEPARTMENT
A ffooe), clean sound
puj! Terrific vetuol
SWEET BELL
PEPPERS
-A
$ . , a good cold
ROASTED
i m KaMk. . i iva4 itwi sa Mim vc mm raiiM i sjsw- wiwo , wi.M-. v
;1 s K s Rrffl fr& 7 ffn ctono 01 .. fl TP K'-lVSn' "
Choice California
J()Mlasa Mavalsl
1 1 .1 til. iAOft . . .
us1 right for olin)
or tolodsl
lP LUNCHEON jS'
I Regular 49 llja
y I 1 SS North Coast
W ( I ) No. 303 Can
:liyQjy APPLESAUCE
Terrmc value! B , , , ff,
:gNy II Regular 6 for $1
ZrX f cans II
fW DRAWN
SORAN'S FRESH
OREGON GROWN M X X W
"Tho finest in poultry" xJV 1
; Cut Up.... 39c lb.
Fresh Pacific. Largo ff f
0H(C t f rar nr r HorBiel 8 lnXm i
Groceteria's Lean
' i&sVssMMEVMHsHVs
u oiViW s 0 tsc VlMiQi BEEF;
n of tlu kjvnbursnr cabski ;- (w
Cr tNsm with th. uk o
Jour cakr and pinch tK
odffas together to cmcltnw
ths chB tvnpUiUlj. Ia
skilki brown tha cabas on
ma side in hot fat. Turn
thna ami pour ever thara
I caa Hunt's Tmmto Sohws,
StaMnnr to 1 minute
basting occiiionjlly.
Ssrre piping not. Alako
t smrvinea.
bbwo mrwfewr or oy m hudgvt-ju LOOK I
GROUND BEEF 3lb..$1.17
CHEDDAR CHEESE . 69c
UIIMT'C TOMATO .J. ,1 M, 9-0'-90.A
nun i o sa uwotoM. oclin4ic
Groceteria
BREAD
with that home-baked
goodness! Baked fresh
daily in our own ovens!
Large White
50 Whole Wheat
100 Whole Wheat
Stone Gr. Whole
Wheat
Cracked Wheat
Egg Sesame
Corn Bread
Butter Crust
French Bread
Rye Bread
Pumpernickel
Dutch Crunch
Cinnamon Bread
Raisin Bread
1943 COPPER PENNY - Coin dealer Edward Baker of San
Francisco displays a copper penny minted in San Francisco
in 1943, a year in which all pennies supposedly were made
of steel, and coated with zinc. He would not say how much he
paid for it, nor would he identify the seller. He would only
say he "paid a good price." Baker sparked a nationwiri.
penny hunt last August when he said he offered a bank clerk
$10,000 for a 1943 copper penny minted in Denver.
(UPI Telephoto)
We are always
happy to
CASH YOUR
PAY CHECK!
The Family Council
Kdltor's Nole: Ttl. Famllv f'nimrll rnntUlc nt a litdco. ncvrhl.
trlnt, tiuPH rlernymcn, tliri'e editors and a women'! rdltor. F.arh artlrla
is a auinmary ot ai actual rase history. The Coiini-ll reports on prob
lems that have been dealt with by responsible agencies and counselors.
(Copyright 1861 Genoral Features Corp.)
Mrs. Anna J. - My son and
daughter-in-law forced me out
of my home.
Mrs. Helen J. - She insisted
we move in with her.
...
- Mrs. Anns J. - What hap
pened to me should be a leS'
son to other parents.
I'm 71 and while I haven't
been turned out into the
street, I'm not much better
off. I've just moved into a
cold, frightening home for the
aged. Five years ago my
youngest son, upon his dis-
ciiarge from tne Army, 101a
9C
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
ROUND STEAK
Swiss Steak 79 lb.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
RUMP ROAST
Completely Boneless!
SLAB BACON
aVDaJ l&lfct.$3?7.
O 0
I
nored the word "temporarily"
their mother's original
olfer.
There may be some solace
tor Anna J. in the thought
that her Initial response to
her son and his bride was a
motherly, humane one. It en
abled her to enjoy, at closer
range .than many grandpar
ents, the launching of a new
branch of her family. And,
in view of her age debilities
and finances, it may have
postponed the day she would
have entered the home any
way. We advise tha mnhpr hnw.
me he and his girl friend were Lv., , Btnn si.,nr,nri h
getting married. They planned son and daughter-in-law. Tho
lo live in a furnished room. As tw0.fami,y setup was just as
niumur, i l-uuiuii t ko uiut- harrl nn tlipm nnrl sho man h
So I said they could share my
apartment temporarily, until
something suitable turned up.
But once they were in, they
never budged lo seek a home
of their own. Now that Helen
is expecting her second baby
and the home will be more un
comfortable for me than ever,
I had no choice but to seek
admission to an institution.
'm still hoping they'll see
they took unfair advantage of
me and give me back my
apartment.
Mrs. Helen J .- At the time
Mother J. invited us we would
have been perfectly satisfied
with a furnished room, but
she insisted we move in with
her. She didn't think It would
look good" otherwise.
Well, she couldn't expect lo
have her cake and eat it too.
Living together, she had our
company and extra Income.
We took over the rent and
food expenses, helped with
the housework and tried to
add to her comfort. Never
once did she mention our mov
ing. When we spoke of throw
ing out her old furniture and
fixing the place up, she not
only approved but encouraged
us.
With our second baby on
the way, we cut down on our
contribution and asked Moth
er J. to chip In toward her
own support. This, in addi
tion to her annoyance at the
crowding and discomforts,
made her angry and she
moved out.
We didn't force her out.
She'd be unable, financially
and physically, to maintain
the apartment her.ielf. But
he goes around with her tale
nf wo which is completely
false.
Th0 Cvacll: From lh r-
(inning it was mistake fir
Anh J. to nia th irKifl
frtUire of taking the coup
As the "Id Ari found (Hit
when he let ths ('smsl's iw'
Into his Irnt, tint Aid it!
That's the time to iot out
aJtngi't r nrt set i ftiriQce
elsewhere. The mothstr should
have, forttsi'en that displace
ment and (dispossession were
In the wvrks.
The cTiildren, In turn, ouglji
not to have Invested heavily
in redecoration without first
having an open and. coura
irous talk witO thiPmolher
about future. Her silence
coulrjuol be assumed to mean:
TheQ'ru.is yours. I surrender!
Assureir evidently, that they'd
nwr be asked to leave, the
junior. J's conveniently Ig-
appeanng particularly un
grateful to her daughter-in-law,
who look over as unpaid
housekeeper for her.
Time and sober second
thoughts may remedy this rift.
Its cause, after all, Isn't malice
but plain human not-very-smart
behavior. ,
West Agrees on
Program in Laos
Washington-flJPII-The West
ern Allies have agreed on a se
ries of political steps lo try to
prevent a big war in Laos,
diplomatic informants said
Wednesday.
Key features of Hie agreed
policy are:
-To promote and encourage
cold war neutrality by the
tiny Southeast Asia kingdom
but not to bow to Red de
mands to include Communisti
in a coalition government.
-To press King Savang Vat
thana and right-wing provi
sional leaders in Vientiane to
form a broader government
including neutralists and to
legally install the new regime,
Britain has dropped its insist
ence that neutralist Prince
Souvanna Phouma, who fled
before the battle of Vientiane
last month, must b restored
to power.
Area Students oi
OSC Honor Roll
Corvallls - Eleven students
from 'the Medford area are
listed oti the fall term honor
roll at Oregon State college.
Medford students Include
Joph H. Teeter, Kdward D.
Nieho, Larry N. Plumley,
Kenneth R. Arnold, Marilyn
J. Persons, Robert L. Steele
mi Clifford B. Cordy.
CiSMrnl Point student are
tJohemtVi Debrot, William L.
Rysn and Alice A. Thompson.
Dnnis J, Caird, Jacksonville,
ejlso Is on the honor roll.
lo be eligible for honor roll
listing, stud'cntQ-iiust make at
least a B plus average f6. the
term. 5
Teeter was one of 77 stu
dents singled out for spcc$l
recognition for having
straight-A grades for fall
term. . .
THlNfQPHlNGS
Providence Some watch
springs are only one-third as
thick as a human hat.
0