Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 29, 1961, Image 22

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    8 B
V i ' J ' It
Gxrl Scouls, with sludenti and personnel of Hoover school, are pic
lured during tree-planting ceremony on the school grounds lest week.
Members oi Girl Scout troops in the Hoover neighborhood purchased a
CMJMIIMire.
Today:
12-5 p.m.-Roxy Ann court
Order of the Amaranth. Med
' ford Masonic building.
8 p.m.-Rcception for Rob
ert Bosworth, Rogue Gallery
220 West Main St.
. Monday:
1:30 p.m.-Board meeting of
Mcdford Garden club, home
of Mrs. Dayton Depue, 1019
; Murray St.
7:30 p.m. - Hedrick Junior
High school Parent-Teachers
association, school auditorium.
Tuesday:
. 9:30 a.m. - District 6C
; Mothersingors, home of Mrs.
Dick Korner, 227 Freeman
rd.. Central Point.
12 noon-Kiwanian Dames,
with Mrs. Robert Hart, 1809
Roxy Ann place.
. 7:30 p.m. -Jackson County
unit, Oregon Education asso
ciation, Jcwett Elementary
school, Central Point.
, 6:30 p.m. - Medford lodge,
IOOF and Olive Rcbckah
lodge. Odd Fellow hall.
8 p.m. - Roxy Ann Home
Economics club, home of Mrs
Irene Shirley, 2681 Buckshot
rd.
Wednesday:
10:30 a.m.-Upper Applegale
Home Extension unit, home of
Mrs. Ray Lampkin.
11 a.m. - Townsend Har
mony auxiliary club, Walker's
ballroom, 415V4 East Main st.
12:30 p.m.-Chaptcr CG of
PEO Sisterhood, home of
Mrs. L. E. Legas, 220 North
Barncburg rd.
12:30 p.m. -Chapter CP of
PEO Sisterhood, home of Mrs.
George Polski, 1501 Lenora
dr.
1:30 p.m. - Contemporary
Book club, home of Mrs. A. N.
Potter Jr., 1315 Queen Anne
ave.
1:30 p.m. - Talent Garden
club, home of Mrs. John Mc
Cardcll, 16 Geneva si., Mcd
ford, 2 p.m. '.- Wednesday Study
club, Girls Community club.
7:30 p.m.-Bethcl 14, Inter
national Order of Job's Daugh
ters. Masonic hall.
8 p.m.-Velerans of World
War I, barracks and auxiliary,
Girls Community club.
Thursday:
1:30 p.m. - Sams Vullcy
Ladles club, home of Mrs.
Paul Shulz, Sams Valley rd.
6:45 p.m.-Rogue River Val
ley Knife and Fork club,
Rogue Valley Country club.
7:30 p.m. - Griffin Creek
Parent - Teachers association,
school gymnasium.
7:30 p.m. -Mistletoe camp,
Royal Neighbors of America,
Knights of Pythias hall.
; Frank Applegate
; To Be Speaker
! Frank Applegale will speak
on color in stamp collecting
i at the next meeting of South
i cm Oregon Stamp club to be
: held at the Girls Community
club on Thursday, February
2, at 8 p.m.
At the January meeting the
officers for 1961 were Install-
: cd by the past president, Mrs.
Eric dc Place. New officers
: are Clyde Smith, president;
f Robert Lowe, vice president;
. Mrs. Lowe, secretary, and Mr.
i Applegate, treasurer.
! Committee chairmen ap
pointed were Mrs. Russell
- Herbert, programs: Mrs. John
' D. Shortridge, refreshments;
Mrs. Irene Cordler, member
ship, and Mrs. Eric de Place,
! publicity.
I Plans were discussed and
arrangements started to hold
a stamp exhibit during 1961
in celebration of the tenth
anniversary bX tire club. Mrs.
E. II. Tucfiicn was nppointcd
.cliajrrnan hi eharoe o ar
ra'Bgcine'ete tor the event.
Two new members admit-
, -ted (41 the club during the
meeting are W. L. White and
Edward Butcher. Refresh
ments were served by Mrs.
Adolph Stcrton and Mrs. Ma
bel Houck.
It was announced that sev
eral club members planned
to exhibit at the Talent hob
by show January 28. Mr.
Smith was to act as a judge
In the stamp division, ,
SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 1961
YT'W '
m St
8 p.m.-Adarel chapter, Or
der of the Eastern Star, Jack
sonville Masonic temple.
8 p.m.-Crater Lake aerie,
Fraternal Order of Eagles,
Eagles hall;
8 p.m. - Mothers of Twins
club, home of Mrs. C. Gordon
Morris, 107 South Elm st.
8 p.m.-Ncighbors of Wood
craft of Phoenix, Phoenix
Community club room.
8 p.m. - Southern Oregon
Stamp club, Girls Communi
ty club,
Friday:
11 a.m.-Griffin Creek Home
Extension unit, Griffin Creek
Grange hall.
12 tioon-Thimble Club of
Phoenix, home of Mrs. Mer
vin Hixson, Culver rd., Photf
nix. Club Continues
Contest Speeches
The second scries of con
test speeches was given by
members of the Toastmistress
club Wednesday night at a
meeting in the California-Ore
gon Power company building
Miss Voda Browcr was toast-
mistress of the evening; Mrs,
Amy True, lopicmistress; and
Mrs. James Vandersteen, In
spiration speaker.
Making- contest speeches
were Mrs. Hoy Hons, uur
Friends;" Mrs. Vandersteen
Instant Everything; Mrs
Richard Williams, "Our
Goals;" Mrs. J. D. Brummond,
Values of Time;" and Mrs.
Bcrnice Kunzman, "God's
Gift.!'
Mrs, James Beam was
grammarian; Mrs. C. A
Thatcher, speech evaluator;
and Mrs. C. Wilson, program
evaluator. Guests were Mrs
Charles Thompson, Mrs. Carl
Clymer and Mrs. Stewart
Milne. -
Mrs. Elmer Ness, educa
tional speaker, gave a talk on
Humor is spice in any
speech." She suggested mem
bcrs try to acquire such an
ability, "as humor can be
planted in our minds and
blossom In our speeches."
Kennedy Nose
Newest Style
Los Angclcs-fllPll-Jacqucllne
Kennedy noses are the latest
styles among beauty conscious
women parading to ' plpstlc
surgeons,
"There was a time when
the girls used to come In for
plastic surgery to make their
noses over like Myrna Loy s,
said Dr. Oscar J. Becker,
Chicago surgeon here for the
30th annual Research Study
club convention.
"Then came the Hedy La-
Marr era, until girls wanted
to have noses like Grace
Kelly's and then, Jackie Ken
nedy noses," said Dr. Becker
Tuesday at a press confer
ence.
Dr. Becker, a specialist from
the University of Illinois, de
scribed the first lady s nose as
"not exactly patrician . , .
more, let us say, straight, a
little uptiltcd.
"I guess you'd say it's Just
Jackie's," he said.,
Chapter Announces
Official Visit Of
Committee Member
Jacksonville - Richard
Brown, Ashland, a member of
the Masonic and Eastern Star
home recreation area commit
tee, will pay an official visit
to Adarol chapter, Order of
Eastern Star, Thursday, Feb
ruary 2. Members of the chap
ter will meet at 8 pm. in the
Jacksonville Masonic temple.
Mrs. H. C. Goldsmith, Mrs.
Frank Root, Mr. and Mrs.
Bcnl B 0 1 e n and Mrs. Fay
Peters will serve refresh
ments, Mr. and Mrs. Fred M.
Gardner, worthy patron and
matron, will preside.
Phoenix - A covered dish
noon luncheon will be held
Friday. Feb. 3, by t A Thimble
club of Phoenix at the home
of Mrs. Mervin lllxon, Culver
road. A business meeting will
follow the luncheon.
0 I
fir" v'j?
4
'Hi
44 t
t-J'-i - W
clump birch to
presented the
Forbes, one of
Six Girl Seoul-Troops
Present Tree to School
Six Girl Scout troops arid
school personnel held a tree
planting ceremony at the
Hoover school on Monday
January 23. The tree planted
was a clump birch bought and
presented to the school by the
girls of the troops in Hoover
neighborhood.
Mrs. Ralph E. Barclay, lead
er of Girl Scout Troop ,192,
eighth grade troop of Hedrick
Junior High school, was in
troduced to the guests by Roy
Gilbertson, school principal;
Mrs. Barclay spoke briefly on
the reasons for the ceremo
nies, and presented Mrs. R. W.
Gray, area president of the
Rogue Valley Girl Scouls.
Judy McFadden of Troop
192 presented the tree, which
was accepted by Les Bush,
student body president; he put
the first shovelful of earth
around the tree. Mr. Gilbert
son put in the last shovelful of
earth, after accepting the lice
for the school and students.
Representatives from each
troop also put a shovelful of
soil around the tree. They
were Janice Hart, Troop 96,
second grade Brownie; Marcia
Quincy, Troop 82, third grade
Brownie; Cheryl Eddy, fourth
grade Brownie; Vicki Milnes,
Troop 52, fifth grade Girl
Scout; Cindy Konschot, Troop
22, sixth grade Girl Scout,
and Penny Forbes, Troop 192.
Mrs. Barclay, in telling the
reasons for the planting cere
monies, spoke of the Girl
Scout "Birthday Years", be
ing celebrated during 1960
1961 and 1962, which official
ly began with an international
convention held in St. Louis,
Mo., in November of 1960,
with delegates from all over
Odd Fellows, Rebekahs
Hold Annual Ceremonies
' Central Point - Mrs. Martin
Johnson and Richard Lowery
were installed as noble grands
of Ml. Pitt Rebekah lodge and
the Central Point lodge, Inter
national Order of Odd Fel
lows, during joint public In
stallation ceremonies Janu
ary 23 at the Central Point
Grange hall.
Other elective officers in
stalled were Mrs. James Belter
and M e 1 v i n Frick, vice
grands; Mrs. Frank Glenn and
James Corliss, recording sec
retaries; Mrs. Clark McDow
ell and John llolgatc, finan
cial secretaries; Mrs. John
Holgatc and John Armstrong,
treasurers; Mrs. William nun
nery, junior past noble grand,
and John Robison, junior past
grand.
Appointive officers install
ed were Mrs. Glen Gerrard
and Francis Marshall, ward
ens; Mrs. Fred Baker and Jo
seph Bodak, conductors; Mrs.
John Robison and Ellsworth
Robison, right supporters
noble grand; Mrs. John Robi
son and ms worm Kouison,
Mrs. Gerald Kime and Clark
McDowell, left supporters no
ble grand; Mrs. John Kime
and Lee Marshall, chaplains;
Mrs. John Armstrong, Marvin
Marshall, Mrs. James Vanrier
Stcen and Edward Inman,
guardians: Robert Mousey,
Mrs. James Williams, Mrs.
Wcldman, and Gerald Kime,
vice grand supporters; Mrs.
Edward Inman and L. D.
Hays, color bearers and Miss
Patricia Kime, musician.
In charge were Norman
Gail, Gold Hill, district depu
ty grand master, of Gold Hill,
and Mrs. Jolin Robison, dis
trict deputy president. Jerry
lleringtoa aud Mrs. Paul
Thompson were dHt!r graml
marshals assisted M xVwr In
stalling deputiitt fm UMf
Hill. - .
Courtesy officers are Mrs.
Melvin Frick and Mrs, Ells
worth, supporter chaplains.
and Mrs. Ernest Taylor and
Mrs, Corliss, supporter junior
past nobles.
Guests introduced were
Ellsworth Robison. 1! e n lul V
grand master, GriSfld Lodgrof
U3 Ik" lf)h:i
'Ti'" -
beautify the school grounds. Judy McFadden of Troop 192
tree, and it was accepted by Les Bush, pictured with Penny
several Scouts who placed earth around the tree.
(Knacksledt photo)
the world. She staled that one
of the high lights of the con
vention was a rose garden pre
sented to the city of St. Louis
in behalf of the Girl Scout or
ganization; the garden is lo
cated in the Memorial plaza
in Ihe heart of downtown St.
Louis. There they planted the
yellow Girl Scout rose. She
explained how the troops
wanted to plant something in
honor of the birthday years,
and had contacted Mr. Gil
bertson, who suggested
clump birch for the school
grounds.
She finished by slating that
this is the opening of he first
chapter but that Ihe story
would be incomplete if the
Scouts let it end here; that the
Girl Scouts and Brownies
have two more years to plant
yellow roses for the project of
the birthday years.
Arrangements for the cere
mony were made by Mrs. Vic
tor Milnes, Hoover Parent
Teacher association Girl Scout
representative.
Many of the yellow Girl
Scout roses, developed by the
firm of Jackson and Perkins,
have been ordered by indivi
dual troops, troop leaders and
by neighborhoods for planting
in parks and on school
grounds. Those interested in
securing one of these rose
bushes are urged to contact
the Girl Scout office, as the
deadline for ordering, which
was to close January 21, has
been extended until February
1. The first bouquet of Yellow
Girl Scout Roses was pre
sented to Mrs. Charles U. Col-
mcr, national president of
Girl Scouls at the St. Louis
convention.
Oregon; Mrs. Riley Appelgate,
vice president Rebekah assem
bly; Miss Patricia Kime, pres
ident Theta Rho assembly
Mrs. John Robison, joint
youth committee, and Paul
Thompson, special district
deputy.
John Robison was present
ed a past grand collar from
his lodge and Mrs. Flannery
a gift from her lodge.
Refreshments were served
following the installation
ceremonies. Approximately
110 guests and members at
tended. Guests Choice
Arrange an oblong platter,
outlined with shiny dark
green leaves, with red and
golden Delicious apples, heap
ed high. Tuck bunches of
grapes, gilded walnuts and al
monds among the apples.
Wrap wedges and sticks of
various cheeses cut to indi
vidual serving size In colored
foil, and lay on the leaves.
Use as a centerpiece first-- as
guest's choice for dessert,
later.
Desk blotters make excel
lent mats when framing pictures.
!H- UTKIll-'I.V HOI 11DIK lIutlrWlM ntxiuncl In thU rhlld
hrdrnnm fronted hy llrlin .Srhlii"n. NSin, t'nttnn l ln
1iinnl In thr plrturr-trnmrit r'rniilrrM) nrnnily Hrrm,
butltrlty chuiUfconorand dut xuttle, and flufJ gwlet.
MEDFORD MAIL
' '" S-
Okizu Group '
The Okizu group of Camp
Fire Girls held a ceremonial
on Jan. 24 at the home of their
leader, Mrs. Herbert Par
tridge. Dolly Patrick received
her trail seeker's charm, and
Margaret Gemaehlich, her
wood gatherer's ring.
All of the girls present re
ceived their membership
cards.
hi U kl. I. '.'I
Housing Authority Says
Suburbia Not All Bliss
By GAY PAULEY
UPI Women's Editor
New York -IUPII- Suburbia is
packed with people who'd
love to trade the "bliss" of the
back-yard
barbecue for a
home in the
heart of town,
says a woman
authority on
housing prob
lems. They didn't
elect suburbia,
said Miss Eliz-
Gay Faulty "both Wood,
former director of the Chicago
Housing authority. Several
factors "pushed" and "pulled"
them to that green patch of
land which lies between urban
and country living.
She said many of those who
desert the city these days,
they're mostly middle income
are pushed by the "lack of
human imagination" in city
planning to fill the inner
man's or woman's need for re
creation, culture and privacy.
"We have excellent archi
tects," she said, in an inter
view. "But abominable plan
ners." They're pushed by deterior
ation of neighborhoods once
settled, stable and populated
by a variety of ages and in
come groups. And, there is a
shortage of good housing they
can afford.
Pulls Toward Suburbia
The pull to suburbia is not
alone the lure o several nun-
drcd square feet of greenery
and the "alleged bliss of the
backyard barbecue, she said
"It is the simple fact that
federal housing legislation is
dedicated to the support of
benefits to buyers and build
ers. . .to sales, not to rental
housing."
Miss Wood indicted public
housine as built mostly "for
one class the low income.'
The housing expert, a brisk
woman with short, graying
hair and bright blue eyes, is
the author of a new pifolica
tion called "The Balanced
Neighborhood," published by
a private agency, the Citizens'
Housing and Planning Coun
cil of New York.
In it, she called on all cities
to offer all income groups, and
the minority groups, the "op-
lion between a good life in the
city and a good life in the sub
urbs."
Otherwise, she said, cities
are courting cnaos ana Disor
ganization. . .waste and deter
ioration." ,
Long-Time Housing Expert
Miss Wood has spent 30
years in Ihe housing field, for
merly serving as secretary of
the Housing Committee of the
Chicago Welfare council, as di
, 1.0
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TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE.
m
Freeze-Drying Method Used To Preserve Beef
By JOYCE SCHULLER
United Press International
Chicago Steak that keeps
indefinitely without refriger
ation promises to be on the
groceryshelf in the next five
years.
Meat packers are combining
the oldest and newest methods
of food preservation to make
the grocery-shelf steak look
and taste like fresh beef. The
combination method, still in
the testing stage, is called
frceze-drying. It makes use of
the two processes in its name
and incorporates the best of
each.
Like ordinary air -dried
chipped beef and Westphalian
ham, freeze-dricd meat will
keep without refrigeration.
And like frozen meat, it will
retain the size, shake, texture
and taste of fresh meat.
But unlike ordinary frozen
Daughters To
Meet Wednesday
Bethel 14, International Or
der of Job's Daughters, will
meet Wednesday, February 1,
at 7:30 p.m. in the Masonic
temple.
The honored queen, Miss
Barbara Morton, states that
the meeting will be conducted
by junior bethel officers. All
parents and guardians of Job's
Daughters, and persons of
proper Masonic relationship.,
are invited to attend.'
rector of the Illinois Slate
Housing board, and from 1937
to 1954 as director of the Chi
cago Housing Authority.
At present, she has a fellow
ship to write a history of pub
lic housing in the United
States.
To Miss Wood, the "one
class community" of the new
suburbs is "abnormal." The
well-balance community has a
variety of both income and
age groups "Children need
to grow up where they are in
contact not only with other
children but with older peo
ple." "
A city must "build in" this
variety, she said, "or it ar
rives on its own as the neigh
borhood deteriorates."
The housing expert made a
special plea for the urban
dwelling males" "I a m
tempted," she said, "to organ
ize a Society to come to their
aid. What can a man do with
his leisure lime? If he lives in
public housing, do-it-yourself
projects are forbidden. He's
left to television, the movies,
or the local saloon."
Itow
How is it you know you're taking no chances
when you let a youngster take your shopping list?
Isn't it for the same reason that you buy 10
of your family's food without actually seeing it?
You know Uiat
A good brand is your best guarantee
: ; . and that the name on the label is your best
buying guide. You have learned to count on good
meats which take hours to
thaw, freeze-dried ones will be
ready to cook after a few min
utes in water.
Easy To Tenderize
It will be easy to tenderize
thoroughly a freeze -dried
steak. Commercial tendcrizer,
added to the water in which
the steak is reconstituted, will
be absorbed, along with the
water, into every part of the
steak.
Freeze-drying virtually will
eliminate any danger of food
spoilage or poisoning. Bacteria
growth requires moisture and
freeze-dried foods have less
than two per cent of their or
iginal moisture content.
For the working woman,
the big advantage of freeze
dried meats will be the con
venience of being able to pick
up a steak on lunch hour, pos
sibly from a vending machine,
leave it in the office all day
or all week, and then soak it
in water for just 10 minutes to
prepare for the broiler.
For restaurants, airlines,
the military and commercial
shippers, the attraction will be
light weight; they weigh only
about one-quarter as much as
fresh meats, and could be
shipped anywhere in the
world.
SAVE!
Reg. $2.98
COCOA MAT
Only X Ea.
SUPER SAVINGS!
Attractive
"SQUEEZIT"
Catsup Dispenser
Holds Full Bottle
Reg. 39c
Reg. 49c Use
COVERED "Halts"
BWLS Kills
OO Crabgrass
HH Seeds
Each Have a
lovely Lawn
Fine for in the
Leftovers! Spring!
send a child
A ivide variety of meats al
ready has been freeze-dried
experimentally by Wilson
and Co., Armour and Co. and
the U. S. Quartermaster Corps
food and centainer institute in
Chicago. Armour will provide
Sir Edmund Hillary with 250
pounds of its experimentally
freeze-dricd food, including
meats, for his next expedition
into the Himalayas this fall.
Combination Method
Essentially, the process is a
form of drying or dehydra
tion, but it starts with frozen
rather than fresh foods.
The foods are dried in a
vacuum chamber at low tem
peratures. Under these condi
tions, ice crystals in meat and
other foods never thaw; they
"boil off" or vaporize without
first turning into water.
The process leaves meat
like a sponge that keeps its
original size and absorbs wa
ter into the spaces left behind
by evaporated ice to take on
the characteristics of fresh
meat again.
The process is slow and
costly, and Wilson researchers
believe it still can be im
proved. Most meat packers have
confined their freeze-drying
experiments to compact cuts-
Ser EASY - Ttr
Str EASY - Ta
LAST CALL
METLOX POPPYTRAIL
nlhikirnillAnc
S-OZrf DIININEKVVMriC
C A I c
20. V&
All Open Stock
10
SPECIALISTS
245 S. Central at 10th
to the store?
brand names. You know the company standi
back of them. You know they protect you.
The more good brands you get to know, the
fewer buying mistakes you'll make. Get ac
quainted with those brands in this newspaper.
You'll get more value for your shopping money
if you do.
1
BRAND NAMES FOUNDATION
Incorporated
A Non-Profit Educational Foundation
37 West 57th St., New York 19, N. Y.
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE
steaks and chops and chopped
meat.
Specialist Advises
On Girls' Clothing
Lincoln, Neb. - IUPU-A child
does not always grow propor
tionately in height and widlli
and this should be kept in
mind when shopping for a
rapidly growing girl, Gerda
Peterson, clothing specialist Jt
the University of Nebraska,
said.
She said that jumpers and
skirts and blouses help to
solve the school clothes prob
lem for the growing young
ster. A jumper with a straight
line is a good example of the
type that can grow in lengih,
as the girl grows in height.
When there is no waist-line,
a belt can be moved up or
down an inch or more to ad
just to the girl's waistline
seam.
Other tips on clothes for
the growing girl.
- A generous hem on a skirt
may be let down and faced.
- A mark left by the origin
al hem edge on an all-wool
fabric can usually be removed
by careful steam pressing and
then brushed to raise the nap
on the fabric.
- SHOP
- SAVE
WO
y.....--
QUALITY AT
LOWEST PRICES!
IN HOMEWAREJf
Phone SP 2-5201
n
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