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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 12, 1962)
MLDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON SUNDAY. AUGUST 12. 1962 Are Popular Music Camps have increased more than 300 per cent since 1947. Chicago-ftlPli-More than 45, 000 youngsters are piping hotter than Pan at music camps and schools across the United States this summer. A survey by the American Music Conference (AMC) showed summer music study enrollment now is 350 per cent greater than in 1950. More than two-thirds of the nation's 150 summer music camps were organized after 1950. Marion Egbert, educational consultant for AMC, said the main reason for expansion in summer music study is the growth of instrumental mu- Teen-Age Boys Eat Most of Food Supply Washington - ll'PD - Teen age boys gobble more of the weekly food supply than any other member of the family. The U.S. Department of Ag riculture's research service es timated a cost of a week's food supply for one growing lad. age 16 to 19, at S8.20. This Most summer music stu dents are teen-agers, the sur vey showed, with 82 per cent of total enrollment in the 14 to 18 age bracket. Twenty one per cent of summer mu sic camps depend on out-of- staters for more than half i was on a low-cost plan their enrollments. Sixty per j if ine family followed a cent of the camps carry out- "moderate" cost plan, the of-state students on their teen-ager's food bill would be rolls. S11.20 a week. On a liberal One of the most important J plan say eating high off the reasons for growth AMC said, hog tne weekly tab is $12 60. is the combination of self- made music and outdoor re gie programs in school sys-' creation, offered by 95 per terns. School-age musicians ' cent of summer music camps. Join Umpqua Dairy and the Jeff i Collie gang TWO BIG KIDDIES DAZE with Tocki & Little Tie Wednesday & Thurs. DOUGLAS ft Urn. Ji JE k AUGUST 15-19 ROSEBURG Freeiers Overloaded Ofen During Summer Urbana, 111. - ilTD - You may be tempted to overload your freezer during the summer when fruits and vegetables are so plentiful. If you don't know the freez er capacity, check the instruc tion book. It will list the load and also give directions that should be followed. Frances Van Duyne, Uni versity of Illinois director ol foods research, said overload ing slows down freezing and may endanger the quality of S3 foods by raising the freezer B temperature. Push a small piece nf steel wool into a drawer knob hole to make a loose screw fit snugly. mk R ftv-W iiMMiMMlhVwiiJ IUnmintii i r - ll HIM ll Meeting Set Roxy Ann Home Economics club members plan lo meet CELERY SAUCE Celery sauce can be made 'Poorer' Pork Cufs Have Become Popular New York - (UPD - Pork Hard. Wednesday, August 15 at 8 I in minutes. Slice celery ribs : products that went begging in p.m., in the home of Mrs. Eleanor Mankind, 51(5 Mid way road. Cohostess will be Mrs. Ray L. Burchfield. Planned landscaping in creases the sales value of an older home. So will a mod ernized kitchen with built-in stove, wall oven and counters diagonally into U inch pieces to measure 4 cups. Melt 2 tablespoons of butter or mar garine in a saucepan, add celery and saute 5 minutes, stirring constantly. Stir in 2 tablespoons of soy sauce and lj teaspoon of sugar Heat 1 surfaced with material that is! minute more, stirring. Serve fire and scratch resistant. hot as a vegelablr. Serves 6. the so-called "good old days" arc among the post popular now at backyard barbecues. The American Meat insti tute said there was so little demand for sparcribs and backbones in the early days of commercial pork packing that Apply a coat of paraffin to these cuts were discarded, the bottom of vases and ash along with everything else but I trays to keep them from the hams, shoulders, sides and scratching the table. Pork was seasonal then -about 1828 - because lack of refrigeration made surpluses hard to handle. With modern refrigeration came wider use of all parts of the animal the' year round. rPENNEY'S- D Plan Dinner Welcome Wagon club has planned a couple's dinner party for Saturday, August 18. interested members may call Mrs. Kenneth Rus?ell, 773-3864, for further information. Penneys th NO REPAIRS . . . . PENTRED SOLES are guaranteed to outlast the uppers . . I u .ti they II outgrov the shoes before they outwear them . or a new pair free 11 i ft .7? r PENTRED SOLES never mark your floors and PENTRED SOLE shoes now have flexible toes for comfort and quick check-up r .1 or tne EXTRA HOURS EXTRA SAVINGS! SHOP HON. and FRI. TILL P.M. SADDLE FOR GIRLS Grown-up black all the way . . . from nylon velvet and smooth leather top lo ils sturdy Pentred soles. As good on Sunday as on schoolday! Sanitized. Sizes 8Vi to 3 B, C, D. 4 99 Count on Penney's Childcraft' Shoes... first vith the revolutionary PENTRED SOLE! OXFORD FOR JR. BOYS Even he will like to shine these scuff resistant uppers ... so easy to make them look like new! Brown or black on rugged Pentred r.oles. Sanitized. Sizes 8Vi to 3 B, C, D. 5 99 CHARGE everything you need for Back-to-School! Posing with school bell in hand befort a replica of an old-fashioned schoolhouse it Mist Minnie Jan Johnson, na tional representative of the Christian Women's club who poke for the last meeting of the valley chapter of the organi lation. The schoolhouse was the setting for a "back to school" style show staged by Mann's Department store for the meeting. Miss Johnson Guest Here Miss Minnie Jane Johnson, national representative of the Christian Women's club from Wisconsin, spoke for the last meeting of the local chapter, held in the Mark Anlony ho tel August 3. About 140 wom en attended. Mann's Department store staged a style show of "back to school" clothes and lunch eon decorations were in the school theme. Models stepped through a schoolhouse door to appear before the audience; the schoolhouse was completed with an old-fashioned pump and bell. Commentator was M r s. Charles Gilchrist and models were Vickie, Linda and Jef frey Jefferson. Jay and Sarah McGoodwin, Marsha Reeves, Dana Darby, Andy Dispensa ry, Shirley Harper, Donna Hubble, Annette Carter, Lin da Wilson, Cecilia Wilson, Sue and Betsy Jahn. Foreign Girl Aids Peace Corps Miss Kann Zollikofer of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, who has been a graduate student at the University of Oregon uKuiie, me pasi year on a fan - American fellowship from the Oregon Federation of Women's clubs, is now in Oklahoma teaching Portu guese to Peace corps candi dates, a Federation release states. She left Eugene July 22 for the University of Oltla home al Norman where she will be an instructor until September 15. Miss Zollikofer came to the United States last August and spent a month in the home of a family in Pleasantvillc, N.Y., under the Putney Exper iment in International Living, before coming to Eugene for her year of study. A graduate of the .Univer sity of Brazil, she was regis tered in the school of journal ism at the University of Ore gon with special interest in radio and television. She hopes by this means to reach more isolated areas of her large country which are still lacking in adequate school fa cilities. Fellowship Used In the 18 years since the Pan American Fellowship Fund was established by the Oregon Federation of Wom en's clubs, 16 South American women have accepted the fel lowship and studied in the colleges of Oregon, and six Oregon women have been able to study in South Amcr ican colleges through the help of this fund. Mrs. Hildred M. Zell, Was co, chairman of the board of trustees of the scholarship loan and fellowship fund, said, "We are proud that the Oregon Federation of Wom en's Clubs was foresighlrd enough to prcceivp the value of this investment in the caue of Western Hemispheric solidarity, and in friendiiiip and understanding ". Of the six Oregon women who had studied under the fellowship grant, two have re mained in South American countries. Miss Jacqueline Saylor, Salem, accepted a fel lowship in 1958 to study in Mendoza. Argentina, and has remained to teach in a bi natinnal education center in Santiago. Chili. An international romance has kept another recipient, Marjorie Elaine Taube. iMrs J Antonio Rivero) formerly of Portland. In Peru. She was in 1951 the first Oregon wom an to apply for a fellowship to study in South America under the Pan-American plan, and now live on an estate nfsr Lima with her huxband and four children. cm IViVERS th YOU CAN COUNT ON PENNEY'S FOR BARGAIN BUYS SUCH AS THIS! 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