Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 25, 1961, Image 6

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    .6 A
WEDNESDAY,
v.
Ranch Style
By HIAWATHA ESTES
' This Impressive and distinc
tive home has been planned
ior outdoor living. Sliding
glass doors open from both the
living room and kitchen to the
large patio at the rear of the
house. Just think how pleas
ant idle moments - could be,
protected from interruption
and observation.
A handsome corner fire
place is a feature of the living
roorh, This room is separated
irom the center-hall entry by
partial walls which 'allow
light from the sliding doors
to also light the entry. These
partial walls will 'make the
living room appear even larg
er than Its already ample
size.
The master bedroom has Ite
own private bath. Both baths
have been located back ' to
back to economize In plumb
ing costs. .
All bedrooms have ward
robes with storage drawers
below. Note the extra wide
linen closet and the guest
sale . .
Y PAT
rfV H """" "
BEDROOM
V II 1 13
5,,H fol tlVINO ROOM
. tEU r
O "H I Hi
's Qol
5! '" '
8EDR00M ' BEDROOM
f 11x12 lOtli
5.99
The pants that really
in
JHWRIW , 191
1
WO- PLAN NO. 3807
S 1460 SQUARE FEET
and Modern
closet at the, entry. Additional
storage space is provided by
the placing of cabinets over
the washer and dryer plus a
floor to ceilln pantry in the
kitchen. There is sufficient
space to build a closet in the
garage and open it into the
family room if extra storage
is desired in this room.
The family room is the In
formal room of the house.
Here the family can relux, the
kids play and the young peo
ple can have their parties. II
is open to the kitchen but not
enough so that guests can see
the sink when the family room
is used as a dining area.
No kitchen can truthfully
be called modern unless it is
efficiently designed so that
the housewife has everything
at her fingertips. It should
have the convenience of the
newest and latest built-ins; an
eating nook and plenty of
light. This pleasant kitchen
can boast of all these advan
tages and more.
Horizontal and vertical sid
. famous maker's pants
6.99
originally 10.98 to 12.98
fit. Thin wale and wide wale corduroy wool and
vivid plaids, s3ids and sftipes. Sizes 8 to 18.
41 lJlfc
1 6'-;rX
KITCHEN I I
18 X 8 SERVICE
Ijd 3 r
:1
FAMILY ROQM -T.
12,16 OARAGE fS
2020 ,
.: z.eyr
Home Plans
ing, a cedar shake roof, plus
stone veneer and planter have
been used in just the right
combinations to produce a
pleasing exterior. The rust
free aluminum windows do
not obstruct the view and are
much more easier to maintain
and keep clean.
Complete . working drawings
for this plan can lie purchased
at a cost of $7.50 for the first set
and S5 for each additional set
when ordered at the same time.
This plan will he avallatile until
May it'i, liMil. l'lcasc allow two
weeks for delivery. If the above
home . does not entirely meet
with your approval, a new home
plan book, Kanch and Modern
Homes can he purchased for S2.
Send all orders for cither plans
or bonks to: Hiawatha Kstcs, P.O.
Box 401-T, Northrldge, Calif.
Newport News, Va. - (TJPD
The 3, 500-ton nuclear subma
rine "Shark" sucessfully com
pleted its preliminary sea
trials Tuesday and returned
to port to prepare for com
missioning ceremonies Feb. 9.
The Shark, believed the fast
est undersea craft in the
world, will be used primarily
as an anti-submarine weapon.
7.99
Redyeing Business Enjoys Boom
In Face of Current Recession
By HENRY J. BECHTOLD
UPI Financial Editor
New York - (UPD - The once
forgotten art of redyeing has
been reborn.
And the current recession
has played a
big role in
bringing boom
times to t h e
redyeing
trade.
The redye-
i n g business
picks up when
the nation's
h o useholders
Henry Becntold are determin
ed to save money, and right
now the wholesale dye plants
serving retail dry cleaners
are busier than they have
been in 15 years.
The Garment Dyers Guild
of America said reports from
across the nation indicates
that the past six months may
have been the best in profes
sional redyeing since just aft
er World War II when mil
lions of veterans brought their
khakis, blues and jackets to
neighborhood dry cleaners to
be recolored for civilian use.
More Expansion Seen
With high unemployment
predictions for well into 1961.
guild leaders look for further
expansion in the redyeing bus
iness. In most families clothing
and, household furnishings are
the first things economical
homemakers keep off the
shopping list during hard
times. So refurbishing rather
than replacement becomes the
order of the day.
Guild members reported
that the redyeing business is
approximately 15 per cent
above last year, which, be
cause of Increased public ac
ceptance of improved devel
opments, had been the best
year in the previous five.
While the bulk of redyeing
buiness today remains in gar
ments, wholesale dyers noted
that more fabric furnishings
are being tossed into the stain
less steel rotary dyer for
stripping, scouring, recoloring
and refinishing.
Permanent Trend Seen
And while most dyers term
the increased attention to fab
ric redyeing a reflection of
many homemakers' uncertain
ty as to when they may be
able to afford replacements in
the near future, many see re
dyeing of fabrics as a perma
nent home furnishings trend.
In addition to the effect of
uncertain economic conditions
on new garment and home
fabric purchases, professional
dyers listed the following as
big factors in the revival of
their industry:
-Most synthetic fibers have
wool blends
been mastered by the dyers,
and therefore nylons, dacrons,
rayons, etc. produce the same
good results as silks, wools
and cottons.
-National promotion given
to recoloring by package do-it-yourself
dyes.
Eliminates Concern .
-Pre-shrunk fabric clothing
now eliminates concern about
shrinkage in newer clothes be
ing dyed.
-A big drive by hotel and
motel owners, restaurants and
institutions for recoloring
rooms through dyeing draper
ies, rugs, bedspreads and ta
ble linens.
OF SMITH & MEN
Bv Jack Smith
(el 1960 Times-Mirror Syndicate
One would like to think of
the college student of today as
an optimistic sort, brimming
with vitality and joi de vivre.
I'm sorry to have to report
that many undergraduates
worry as heavily as the rest
of us and regard the future
with misgiving.
That's the conclusion I draw
from the answers given by 100
students of California's Long
Beach State College to this
three-dimensional question:
"What is your biggest worry-as
a member of the inter
national community? as a res
ident of the United States?, as
a student?"
In the international field
their answers are what we
might expect of any clear
thinking group.
They are muddled, confused
and frightened about war,
armament, Cuba, foreign pol
icy, Laos, intolerance, sliding
morality and everything else.
On the national scene
they're worried about racial
strife, the economy, Commu
nism, the downgrading of in
tegrity, inroads on personal
freedom, materialism, apathy
and the draft.
One lone wolf is worried
about the cost of automobile
insurance because it's going
up.
Another is worried about
Sen. Goldwater but he didn't
indicate whether it was be
cause Goldwater is going up
or down.
.
You can see our students
are a responsible group of
worriers. Their worries are on
a high plane, although some
what abstract. i
It's at the campus level that
their worries take on flesh
and color and individuality.
-The psychology in regard
to redyeing has changed con
siderably. Where once some
families might be ashamed of
redyeing because of social im
plications, the modern home
makers have no such inhibi
tions about using a dollar
saving device for prolonging
the useful life of clothes and
furnishings.
Most dyers feel the above
factors calling for emphasis
on coloring and the perfected
techniques within the indus
try will be their safeguard in
boom times for the entire
economy.
For example, 14 students
say they are worried about
parking. By extension, we
must assume that i4 per cent
of American college youth is
worried about parking.
This is an astonishing fig
ure., It represents a greater po
litical fprce than the entire so
cialist party, the, American
Legion and the National Coat
& Suit Manufacturers associ
ation put together.
There are lone wolves in
the field of local worries, too.
They have worries that aren't
common to the group but are
none-the-less poignant.
One young man is worried
about how to find a girl
friend. Another is worried
about how to avoid finding
one until after final examina
tions. These are ageless problems.
They will haunt young men
when Laos, Cuba and even the
United State are sandblown
pieces in an archeological puz
zle. That may be soon enough.
Altogether, I'm proud of
this generation. They are
more mature worriers than I
ever was. While Spain and
Ethiopia were being rent asun
der I was mainly worried
about my girl friend and an
ROTC captain named Chal
mers. Subsequent events
proved me right, too. She was
dazzled by the uniform, I
suppose.
Today's students are global
worriers. Their worries may
be taken as clues to what ails
the nation and the world.
They bear solemn considera
tion. If I were President Ken
nedy I certainly would create
a Secretary of Automobile
Parking and Insurance Rates
at once.
I might even try to find an
unused brother or sister and
assign him or her to keep an
eye on Goldwater.
Fan Magazine
Editor Kills Self
Hollywood - (UP1I - Norman
Siegel, editor of a national
screen magazine and former
newsman and publicity chief
for Paramount Pictures, com
mitted suicide Tuesday by
leaping from a 13-story build
ing, police reported.
Siegel, 56, who managedBj
Hollywood troupes to royal;
command performances in j
London in 1946, 1947 and j
1948, plunged from the roofi
of the Guaranty Building near
Hollywood and Vine and land-,
ed on the third-floor roof of
an adjoining building. He left
no notes to indicate a motive, j
Police said Siegel, West
Coast editor of Photoplay ;
magazine, only moments be-
fore his death bought a cup !
of coffee from a commissary :
on the roof without giving i
any indication of his inten-.
tions.
TOO MANY SCROLLS
Los Angeles - (VPD - County ,
supervisors had to postpone
a discussion Tuesday of a way
rif getting more accomplished
at their meetings by cutting i
down on the presentation of j
honorary scrolls. The super
visors never got around to the ;
discussion because in addition
to their regular work they :
hod to take time to hand out
embossed resolutions honoring
actress Mltzi Gaynor, Wayne
O. Cookus, state president of
the Fraternal Order of Eagles
and singer Pat Boone.
Highest production of gold
in Canada was in 1947 when
5,345,179 ounces, valued at
S205.789.392. were mined.
Symptoms of Distress Atlslnq from
STOMACH ULCERS
due to EXCESS ACID
QUICK RELIEF OR NO COST
" V (vrr fivr i!!!it-n Twokic ( k
WtLLARD TREATMENT Iw twn!l
lor rrlti-i oi tvmptnimot rifirronrtiiit- irm '
Stomach :inrt Duedrnal Vict n iic (o
ceti Acid Poor Dlgtition. Sour or llrrict
Stomach. Gaitlrteit. Hf-arttturrt. Sleep
Iriimtt. etc.. din ; Etrttl Acid. Ash '
"WHUrd'v Mc-Mact" ji fully fxplr."
this home ly.iitiirruft- at
BIG Y PHARMACY, CITl
DRUCO WEST MAIN MMCY
WAINSCOTT'S
PHARMACY.
They'll Do It Every
VHEN GOBlMA
WANTS
A LETTER
MAILED,
NOBODY BUT
NOBODY- evem
LETS ON THEY
HEAR HER
Until she
starts
OUT THEM
THE
Avalanche
BEGINS-
THANXAHO AUPdP
THE HATLO MAT TO
filABWA HORN, ,
(NO ADDRESS)
MT. VERNON.
OHIO
Portland Paper To
Portland -(UPD- The semi
weekly tabloid newspaper, the
Portland Reporter, plans to
start publication as an after
noon daily sometime during
the week of Feb. 5.
Publisher Robert D. Webb,
former sports makeup editor
of the Oregonian, announced
Tuesday the strike-born paper
had become a member of the
Associated Press.
The Reporter was establish
ed Feb. 11, 1960, by union
members who were on strike
against the Oregon Journal
and Oregonian. It is now pub
lished with equipment leased
to the company by the Inter
national Typographical Union
Imported Genuine
BLACK FOREST
CUCKOO
CLOCKS
Hand tamtd
Dailifoni mohojonr
Cutkoos imf
IS minutti Swinging
pendulum
' l7"V -.-a- t -
Speciof
iff
fl
Gilette Razor
Colgate Denial Creams - 69
TOOTH PASTE
I - Chlorophyll
Magic Turbin
Tim T
Combination
HOT WATER BOTTLE
and Syringe
Reg.. $1.69
1-Yr. Guar.
OeUilfo Vaporizer
98c Gillette Foamy trl.
Gcroihy Gray
79c Leolrio Shave
3-Spced Elec.
Richard Hudnut
Keal Lamp
Reg.
1.10
Men's Cotton
Vitamin C
100 Mgm..
Therapeutic Vitamin
Maintenance Vitamin
Alarm Clocks
LEE!!
900 calorie diet
3'i-lb. or 7 days
i&Lain's Drug Centre
t North Centt THllfTY CRISM STAMPI SHM11
6par $3$ Aft. 9 r.M.-CW! fawiMyo
Time
.
BTHIilf IS A MOTAWOROl5il 1
ifffioWK !9?P'"YS9,,f'TOs- i you take (I
(mv5L?'$I IJ&ZS'iS? XPOST OFFICE? tUESE700?) I
MYSELF rg I y0u'RE (XHHa,WLL M30 DO ME ) V I
Become Daily Week of Feb. 5
and brought here from Miami,
Fla.
Staff of 250
Webb said the Daily Re
porter would have a staff of
250, including 52 newsmen,
all of whom will work with
out pay except strike benefits
for as long as six, months if
necessary. '
The paper will publish six
afternoons a week with three
editions daily. It will compete
directly with' the afternoon
Journal. Stereotypers, other
craft workers and the Ameri
can Newspaper Guild went on
strike against both (Me Jour
nal and the Oregonian Nov.
10, 1959. There has been no
69c Dr. West
Tooth Brushes
Adjustable, with Blades
Reg. 1.95
Reg. 69c
Whites
A&D
No Fastener; Adheres
to Itself. Reg. $1.00 for..
op Brush Curlers
Durable plastic jar, automatic
shutoff. 12 to 14 hr. Reg. $7.95 .
Lipsticks
With Bottle of AQUA VELVA -Both for
Heat Pad 1 Yr.
Guar. Reg.
Color Glory
Reg. $1.50
CLOSE OUl
69c
Bath Scale
Handkerchiefs
Mineral Formula..
Mineral Formula
Regular $2.98 for.
food. Chocolat or vanilla.
supply
By Jimmy Hatlo
settlement although both pa
pers continue to publish.
The strike period has been
punctuated by several inci
dents of violence. These in
cluded the dynamiting of 10
newspaper trucks in Portland
and Oregon City last Jan. 31,
the shotgun wounding of Don
ald Newhouse, Oregonian pro
duction manager and a cousin
of Oregonian owner S. I. New
house, and numerous picket
line skirmishes.
Both the Journal and the
Oregonian are still being
picketed, although the strike
has been declared illegal by
the National Labor Relations
Board and federal courts.
3 for 69'
$39
OINTMENT
All
Sizes
PRICE
Sylvan ia Flash Bulbs
Press 25 Carton 98c
M2-Carton 89c
AG 1 -Carton 69e
$4.95
$1.29
2 for $1.00
79c
$1.89
$2,98 .
69c
Only $3.95
Regent
8 for 69c
100 ,or59c
100fOr$5.95
1002.95
$1.95
$3.95
I
6STEM THRIFT 4TORI-
(I
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