o
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEOFORD, OREGON
Fifteen
Councils
Represented
Fifteen councils of the Poc
ahontas lodge were represent
ed at the meeting of the Wea
tonka council Friday, June 8
when Mrs. Robert Etzel,
Compton, Calif., great Poca
hontas of California for the
Degree of Pocahontas, made
her official visit to the coun
cil. Mrs. Orval Hayes, who
holds the office of Pocahontas
in the local council, presided.
Other officers making of
ficial visits included Mrs.
Nelcie Robison, V a 1 1 e j o,
Calif.; Mrs. Catherine DcBon,
Eureka, Calif.; Mrs. Vivian
Bowser, Chico, Calif.; Mrs.
Olive Harington, Roseville,
Calif.; Mrs. Stella Ely, Palo
Alto, Calif; and Mrs. Hazel
Shireman, San Francisco. Al
so at the meeting was Roland
Wicker, Medford, guest trus
tee of the Improved Order of
Red Men.
Mrs. Etzel was presented a
myrtle wood cup and saucer.
Refreshments were served
from tables decorated with In
dian mortars, papooses in car
riers, and floral arrangements.
Grand Master
Visits Gold Hill
Gold Hill - Odd Fellows
lodge in Gold Hill entertained
the new grand master, Walter
Murphy, of the Oregon grand
lodge May 29. Also present
were Elsworth Robison, Cen
tral Point, past grand mas
ter. Earl Murphy, grand chap
lain, and Ted Wagner, district
deputy grand master of the
Grants Pass lodge.
Raymond Thompson, mem
ber of the local lodge who re
tides in Tacoma, Wash., was
present as were visitors from
Central Point, Grants Pass,
Medford, and the Gardner
lodge.
Refreshments were served
by members of Amethyst Re
bekah lodge, Mrs. Walter Mc
Lean, noble grand, Mrs. Paul
Thompson and Mrs. Wilbur
Martin. Assisting them was
Mrs. Raymond Thompson.
ret
y- h A till! 1 u khu,. i L. . "-
1
m
i : - A
Great Sachem Tad Meves of the Cali
fornia Red Men and Mist Rogue Valley
(Marty Wyatt of Jacksonville) greatad one
another with the tribal salute before tha
parade which tha Red Man and Pocahontas
lodges staged in Madford June 9. Tha pa
rade was part of tha festivities of a district
convention of the two lodges which brought
southern Oregon and northern California
tribes to Medford.
Calendar
Calendar notices and news for
the society section of The Malt
Tribune must he submitted in
writing and deadline for the Sun
day edition is 1 p.m. Friday. Dead
line for the weekly calendar is 9
a m. of the day of publication and
for week day news is 5 pjn. the
day before publication.
Wednesday:
6:30 p.m. - Medford Lions
club auxiliary, home of Mrs.
J. A. Tomjack, 918 Grant
ave.
Thursday:
1 12 noon - Women's Fellow
ship of Congregational church,
Pilgrim house.
12:30 p.m. - Adarel Social
club, Jacksonville Masonic
hall.
12:30 p.m. - Sojourners,
Girls Community club.
4
Letters on shirts or mono
grams on linens will stand out
if they're ironed on the wrong
side with the design placed
on a large folded bath towel.
Winemaster Advises on
Types, Uses of Wines
By JEANNE LESEM
United Press International
Sonoma, Calif. - WPD - You
are a wine connoisseur if you
know the wines you like, says
' Al Brett, wine-
master a t a
historic vine
yard near
here. Brett
said he gives
this answer to
a typical ques
tion from tour
who show up
ists who show
up on summer
week ends at
at Historical Landmark No,
392, the Haraszthy winery
and cellars. He estimated that
a typical week end brings 500
to 1.000 visitors, who also
Jeanne Leiera
Downtown
ft- f
I if
m
Medford
THE
SHEATH
AND
SWEATER
ON
STAGE
0R
SUMMER
Found Only at
BURELSON'S
in Medford
Indispensable basic
to wear all summer long
the beautifully cut sheath
and its handsome matching
sweater byTabak of California.
In cool-looking eyelet batiste
embroidered in Grecian key
motif. Bateau neck dips to a
surprise low in back.
Orion cardigan is appliqued in
matching embroidery and lightly
sprinkled with rhinestones.
Further reason why Tabak
is fothion season after season.
One from
lection of
I large se-go-togelh-
arsl Select yours nowl
Your Charge Account
Invited
SHOP EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT UNTIL 9 P.M.
Main and Bartlett Streets
Phone 772-6423
ask, "What's your best kind
of wine?"
"Your own taste buds
should be the judge," he re
plies. And he adds a warning
against judging wine quality
solely by price.
Many fine wines are also
produced from more plentiful
grapes that are easier also to
handle and need less aging to
reach their best flavor, Brett
said. The cost of producing,
aging, bottling and shipping is
reflected in the price to the
consumer.
Rarer Grapes
A higher price means a
rarer grape and a more aristo
cratic wine, Brett said during
a visit I made to Buena Vista
Vineyards, where the modern
California wine industry be
gan, li was started in 1857
by a Hungarian nobleman,
Count Agoston Haraszthy.
Brett said that any leftover
wine should be corked, re
frigerated and consumed with
in a day or two. Top quality
wine will not sour, he added.
but it will spoil from exposure
to air and light.
This is especially true of
the varietal or premium
wines, the finest California
wines which are named for
grape varieties instead of
growing regions. Unlike pas
teurized wines, they cannot
withstand extremes of heat
and cold.
The Wine institute, industry
association for California
vintners, adds that table
wines' low alcoholic content
makes them about as perish-
ble as milk. Sweeter dessert
and appetizer wines, with a
higher alcoholic content, will
keep for several months in
partly-filled bottles.
New Wines
American have long prefer
red sweeter wines, even for
table use, said institute direct
or Marjorie Lumm. This
preference led some American
vintners to develop new wines
by adding natural fruit Bnd
berry flavors to traditional
grape wine bases. But Brett
sees a trend back toward
drier wines.
The absence of vintage
years on most California wine
labels is a guarantee of uni
formity, added the institute.
Under American regulations.
no wine bottle may bear a
vintace label unless it con
tains 100 per cent the wine of
that year.
California's climate Is
uniform that wine quality
varies only slightly from year
to year, but most vintners
still prefer to blend wines of
different years to maintain
balance. j
Some wines are best when
only a year old. said the in
stitute, but others reach their
peak at 50 years or more.
Some century-old champagne
is stored at Buena Vista, but
it is unlikely that anyone ever
will taste' it. The sparkling
wine is buried in crumbling
tunnels back of cellars that
were damaged in the 1BUO
earthquake. The cellars have
been repaired but the cham-
naane is beyond reach because
the tunnels are unsafe to enter.
4
Hiqh or Low
Svllabub dessert can be
made the high or low calorie
way. If you are not a weight
watcher, gently fold 1 table
spoon of confectioners' sugar
into Vi cup of heavy cream,
whipped. Stir in 1 tablespoon
of brandy. Using 6 parfait
glasses, alternate layers of the
cream with sections from 2
peeled orangca and ' i cup of
sliced strawberries. For a low
er calorie count, substitute 1 i
nackase of instant dessert
topping mix reconstituted ac-
cording to package directions
and sweetened with 1 table
spoon each of confectioners'
sugar and brandy. With this
product, each of 6 servings
Medford Woman
At Ceremonies
Mrs. Wayne Welty, 2940
Hillcrest road, returned
home Monday after being
away for more than a week
to attend graduation ceremon
ies June 3 at Oregon State
university when her son,
James R. Welty, received his
doctor of philosophy degree
in engineering.
While away Mrs. Welty vis
ited her mother, Mrs. Goldie
Samuels, McMinnville; and
she was accompanied on the
return trip by Dr. and Mrs.
Welty and their family who
live In Corvallis, and her
son, Vance Welty, who has
completed his freshman year
at Oregon State university.
En route here they visited
Oregon beaches.
Vance Welty will spend the
summer at his home here.
Sister Visits
Mrs. Rheta Coles of New
York City is visiting for the
month with her brother and
sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin J. Lattie, Phoenix
road.
Last week the group, ac
companied by ' the Lattie's
son, James Lattie of Port
land, vacationed al the coast
including a trip by mail boat
to Agnes.". They also fished
al Lake Woahink near Florence.
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, 1362
Newlyweds Volunteer For Study
B 3
By APRIL W. STONE
United Prats International
Washington -UPlu A unique
marital adjustment study of
200 newlywed couples in the
capital has passed the honey
moon stage-the federal proj
ect now needs a nursery
school.
The project, besun in July,
1959, is called the Study on
Biosocial Growth and Devel
opment. It is being sponsored
by the National Institute of
Mental Health (NIMH).
Studies of the couples' in
itial adjustment "may provide
counselors with their first op
portunity to make predictions
on whether or not marriage
partners will or will not make
good parents," a spokesman
for the institute said.
No other study ever has fo
cused on what influences the
emerging family patterns have
on the personality and mental
health of the infants from
birth to the time they are
ready to enter school, NIMH
said.
The institute plans now to
study the parents' first-born
Golden Wedding
To Be Observed
Mr. and Mrs. William H.
Pollock will celebrate their
golden wedding anniversary
Saturday, June 16, with open
house at their home, 30 East
wood drive.
Friends are invited to call
between the hours of 2 and
a nursery school setting
They hope to see how the
early adjustment of the par
ents influences the behavior
development of the children.
Each husband and wife, to
gether and separately, dis
cusses everyday life with a
team of investigators. Such
conferences are to be contin
ued in special rooms at the
nursery, the NIMH said.
Target date for completion
of the special school is June,
19H3. By then the first of the
children will have passed
their third birthdays.
Parents will bring their
children to the nursery and
take them home at the end of
the day, just as they would for
any other school. Television
cameras will monitor the
youngsters' behavior in class
or at play.
Sponsors of the program
stressed that the participating
couples are not mental pa
tients and are not under treat
ment. They are average citi
zens, typical of a community,
who volunteered for the study.
Return
Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Riebe,
1117 Reddy avenue, have re
turned from a two-week trip
which took them to San Fran
cisco and Los Angeles, Calif.;
Tucson, Ariz.; Nogales, N. M.; '
Las Vegas and Reno, Nev 1
and Portland. In Tucson they
visited Mr. Ricbe's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Ross, and
in Portland they visited other
relatives.
In Roseburg j
Ashland - Mrs. Eliza b e t h
Sommer of Oak street spent
several days with her son,
Richard, who has recently
purchased a ranch near Roseburg.
FOR FATHER'S DAY
from
ANDY'S, c I CK ft
i Jjttpcrb eJJiamondl
In nndimt Mlling ....
0tctiftf in it raafiant fbilul
iwlrl, ll th brattk.libini
beauty ant mffftiflcanl fUry (
Iha I pact .
S tfatvfd ml m prtt iiw
YOUR FAMILY STORE
218 East Main - Next to Parker Woods
Open Friday Kites 'til 9
DOWNTOWN
L fP ttetlu i :
LOWEST PRICE EVER
2 Transistor Radio
Pocket siza. Ideal for outings. Com
plete with ear-phones, and carrying
case.
4
57
Reg. 6.99
TRANSISTOR
BATTERIES
25c
STORE ONLY
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS TIL 9
GIFT FOR DADI
6 Transistor Radio
Pocket Radio in pigskin case with 6 volt
battery and dynamic earphone.
88
Reg. 14.95
NOTHING DOWN
50e Per Month on Approved Credit
MEN'S HAWAIIAN
SHIRTS
Exotic Island prints. Ideal Father's
gift. Sizes S.M.L. large selection.
Day
Reg.
1.98
33
ASSORTED PLASTIC
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS
Include butter dishes, ketchup
EE
dispensers, napkin
holders, mugs,
bowls, etc.
t
CHARGE
IT!
OUR LOWEST PRICE EVER . .
5-WAY ALUMINUM CHAISE
COMPAREI Super-sturdy
1-inch aluminum tubing
folds for storage. Back ad
justs S ways. 5-strip
Velon webbing in green,
or yellow.
"749
U
Reg. 10.95
SPECIAL PURCHASE
CARPENTERS
TOOLS
Asst. Includes f"
wrenches, pilars,
chisels, drill sets,
hammers, saws,
scrawdrivars,
wood carving, sat,
files, (avals, ate.
t
Valuas to 1.59
ASSORTED PLASTIC
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS
inrlurJea cuttlerv. trays, bowl set,
picnic pack, buckets,, waste baskets,
dish pans, refrigerator 9 for SI
dishes, etc. T
PRINTED WASH CLOTHS
100'
Approx.
square. Reg
each.
cotton.
12 inches
15c
13 :$1
BOYS' POLO
SHIRTS
WASHABLE
4-6-6x
Assertad Colors
3
BOYS
HAWAIIAN
SHIRTS
Colorful prints
Sizas 4-16
Reg. 1.29
8-7
SALE
WOOD PICNIC
BASKET
Rog.
2.98
157
Hand-drawn oak
splints, plywood cov
er, swing handles.
Maple finish. 18xl2x
9 inches.
SPORTSWEAR YARDAGE
yds. $
36 & 45 in. widths. Solid
and Prints. Ideal for dresses,
capri sets, etc. Wide selec
tion, good lengths.
Values to 79c yd.
2
100-FT. ROLL SISAL
ROPE
Vt" Diameter
Heavy Duty
IT
BEAN BAG
ASH TRAYS
Assorted Colors
Filled with gravel
Reg. 39c
E
t
large Size
BEAN BAG
ASH TRAY
Reg.
59e
27c
CHILD'S
SNEAKERS
Imports. Heavy ribbed
rubber soles, corduroy
uppers. Red, blue. 5 to
12. Rag. $1.9.
77
RATTAN
CHAIRS
Queen size. Natural col
or. Easy to store. Cool,
comfortable. Savel
Reg. $3.98
BAMBOO ROLL-UP BUNDS
3'x6' 87c 8'x6' 2.69
4'x6' 1.59
6'x6' 1.98
IflmwPtonniiA.
10' x 6' 3.49
12'x6 4.69
Comparel
IMPORTED
T0Y0 CAPS
17
1 1
Men's sports
coolers in
Legion ihape.
Many pat-tam.6'i-7,l.
has 79 calories.