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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 14, 1962)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14. 1962 STAR GAZER'J . AIM Ah ftVUt.22 i- 7-26-31 yf TAUtUS A- APR. 21 n V6-39-4M3 tejV 66-76-8 ft CANCfK JUNI23 JULY 23 14-17-21.3S OUUM MAY 22 JUNE 22 19-22-23-5(1 S8-6I-74 uo 55S-AUa.23 ?3ll-18-38 S68-72-81-8S., VUGO AUG. 24 SEPT. 22 Ov 4. 6-16-241 5C41-77-78 -B CLAY H POUAN- M Your Only Adnity Gurde M According to fr)e Start. To develop message for Saturday, read words corresponding to numbers of your Zodiac birth sign. OCT1. I 111 5-25-44-47 dTl 2Yoo'J 3U 4 Work 5 Children eln 7 Hoy 9Put lOAnxJotar 1 1 Toke 12Your 13Awai 14Heooway 15 Tim. 16 Harmonious 46 Writ lstvrm 4Add 31 Vim 32 Foot 33 Vigor 34 Your 25Coreer 36 Don t 37 Lener 38 W.irt 39 Rely 40 On 41 With 42 Forward 43 Hear 44HcDbiet 43 Or 18 Exlra 19Someone 20 Charm 21 In 22 May 23 Request 24 Coooeiaticri 54 In 25 Pets 55 Zest 48 SporUe 49 The 50 Your 51 Your 52 Word 53 Plans 26 New 27Beu 28 Caution 29 Smile 20 Ulu 54 The 57 H.m her SSTime 59 6egai otOr o2 Present 63 Peroral 64 Shape 65 Financial 66 Or e7Todoy 68 Popere 69 To 70 To 71 Up 72 Jewelry 73 Conlcctj 74 Money 75AHo.r 76 News 77 Others 78Todoy- 79 Favorably 80 From 81 Personal 821s 83 Practice 84 Your 85 Program 86 Economy 87 "GO" 88 Powessicrvs 89 Others 90 Now 915, SCOtrjp 0CT.24tS NOV.2J M5-30-56 sTl 63-70-83-861 U64TTAKIUS DEC 22 lLI B1-53-59-O0V I64-71-79-90AS: Gooi () Advene CArexORM nrr 21 c 8-10-13-341 b7-46-57 -A AQUARIUS Lax. 21 FEt, 19 9-27-32-42nc nscis MAR.2I O-, to m ne2 I " ' i"v-r I L9-522-8Asy Ashland Teacher Named Chairman Ashland Dr. Loy Prickett, chairman of the business de partment at Southern Oregon college, has been named gen eral chairman for the coming Oregon Business Education as sociation convention. The con vention will be held Friday and Saturday, Oct. 28 and 27, at the Seasider hotel in Sea side. Members of the steering committee from southern Ore gon include: Louis Mahar, Medford High school; Jerry Eurick, Ashland High school; Walter Nelson, Grants Pass High school, and Dr. Adele Thompson and Leonard Rob ertson, both new members of the Southern Oregon college business department. The steering committee will meet Sept. 15 at the Seasider hotel to make final convention plans, Dr. Prickett announced. WHY PAY MORE For Quality Paint? Pa (OH W" ' . frVCIOK' --- direct w'-r the Weir. ..e-eOSWlwrp. loW- jf tH 01 to you ftRICESj PAINT THINNER 29c GALLON IN YOUR METAL I CONTAINER 7" ROLLER TRAY $1.30 Value UTILITY OIL BASE OUTSIDE WHITE PAINT k ttn?l GALLON y "".-L i"'. IJ, Limited Quantity MARINE WHITE ENAMEL Quick-drying, no odor, wathabk PVA point, drii in , X mmtrtM. Up to t-U0 decorator colon. 'MO I Qt. nosir FLOOR ENAMEL PTsISAAaAx J? xi ri ri : PAINT! Second gallon free of extra costl (starred items only) Famous CROSBY SHAKE PAINT Sett finish for ruilic lurfocii. 10 ( fturorii Weitcrn colon plui whit. Doubts your paint dollar I 598 GAL. 2nd GALLON FREE! 100 Pure! WHITE OUTSIDE House Paint, M GAL. 2nd GAL. FREE1 Stlf Uvtling, tuptr ior covirogt and laiting quoltty, oiy bruihtng. Continental Skyline LATEX PAINT 2nd GAL. FREE! j $3.98 Value! WONDERSHEEN Redwood Stein U GAL Tlwli -blind ttani tHiotifxt, priiirvif 1 ffttttlt uim$, frtf'Mr pifi h)imif, (iMflf, k. BRUCE BAUER LUMBER CO. & MAJOR BRAND PAINTS 765 SO. RIVERSIDE MEDFORD FAMILY COUNCIL Editor'! note: The FunUr Coun til consist! of e Judge, psychia trist, Uiree clerrfymen. three editors mnd a womeD'i editor. Each article Is a summary of a family disagree ment presented to the Council. The Council deals with problems, major and minor, encountered by guid ance counselors and social workers. Edited by Mrs. Alma Denny. (Copy right by General Features Corp. Beverly H. - He's disabled and makes a shocking pro posal. Cary H.-I'm sorry for her. I want to be generous. Beverly H. - My husband had a stroke two years ago. Although he regained most of his faculties, he is confined to a wheel chair for getting around. And due to his heart condition, he has been cau tioned against marital rela tions. It embarrasses me to repeat his suggested "solution." One of our friends is an attractive widower. When his wife was alive, the four of us used to go out together. Now Cary wants to permit me to have an "affair" with this friend. To add to my discomfort, I'm a delegate to a convention in Denver which this man must also attend. My husband says, "Go and have a good time." How can I keep things straight. . Cary H.-I'm no dog In the manger. I want to be fair. Bev is only 40 and I can't bear to watch her wasting her years away. I know my idea sounds batty, but I've given it a great deal of thought. Nobody is being hurt by it. If the tables were turned, if she were the disabled one, I think I'd ap preciate an offer along those lines. What's wrong with my tell ing Bev honestly that I feel she has a right to fill needs that she can't expect me to provide for ever again? Our friend is a fine fellow. If she wishes, I'll talk this over with him myself. The Council: Far from hurt ing nobody, Cary's brainstorm will hurt three people sorely - plus the institution of mar riage. The Idea of a "vice-hus band, condoned and sanc tioned by the husband for his wife, affronts the sensitivities of all three on. the grounds of right and wrong. It s tav moral. Then there are individual angles. Is Cary really being broadminded, or just mis chievous? Is he fanning flames so as to be able to watch a fire? There may be an under. current of prurient Interest in his altruistic invitation. Without realizing it, he might have anticipated Beverly's reports as a source of vi carious experience. A profes sional counselor may well dis cuss that possibility. As to Beverly, how can she know but that Cary is merely testing her, awaiting her re sounding, vigorous No? And the other man? Cary takes it for granted that he will leap at the offer to join In an un palatable and precarious ar rangement. He may be too smart for that. But cary s basic error is his lifting one part of the delicate husband-wife rela tionship out of context and giving it undue importance. No matter wnat Freud says (and his views are still de batable), the sex angle in marriage is part and parcel of an elaborate network of relationships. By itself, it's little more than an animal activity. Intermeshed with spiritual, mental and emotion al bonds of closeness, as is possible in a good marriage, it is an added unity. Lary need not feel sorry for Beverly. In caring for him, she exercises a new cor ner of her heart. She is fuelled and propelled by secretions released from wellspringsiof tenderness. "For better or for worse" are relative terms Through unexpected emotion al rewards, both Cary and Beverly may find the "worse' getting better and better each year. Feeding the Family By ZOLA VINCf NT, Food Editor Waffle Belters Tike On New Excitement The list of popular types and ways of serving waffles grows as teenagers find them to their liking. Here are a few versions that are certain to please. To standard waffle recipe printed on package of pancake and waffle mix, sim ply add your choice of the fol lowing ingredients. Luncheon or Supper Waf fles! Serve plain hot waffles with creamed chipped beef, creamed chicken, tuna or sal mon. Consider asparagus ham roll with cheese sauce or scrambled eggs and little sausages. Cheese Waffles. Add one- half . cup grated American cheese to standard batter. Nut Waffles. Add one-half cup chopped nuts to batter. Bacon Waffles. Add chop ped crisp bacon. Fruit Waffles. Add three fourths cup chopped apples or two-thirds cup frozen or canned blueberries. Ham Waffle. Sprinkle two tablespoons finely diced cooked ham over batter of each waffle just before baking. Lemon or Orange Waffles. Add two teaspoons grated lem on or orange rind to egg-milk mixture before combining with dry ingredients. Serve with lemon or orange sauce. Coconut Waffles. Add one cup shredded coconut to bat ter or sprinkle coconut over each waffle before baking. Chocolate Waffles. Add two squares melted cooking cho colate to batter. Quick Lemon Nut Bread Using a biscuit mix, you can quickly put togetner these makings for a delect able lemon nut bread like this. In a mixing bowl combine three cups biscuit mix, one- fourth teaspoon salt, one-hall cup chopped nuts, one tea spoon grated lemon rind, Measure one-fourth cup lem on juice and three-fourths cup California honey; add one- half cup milk and one egg, slightly beaten; combine and add to dry mix. Blend until all mix is dampened. Turn into well-oiled loaf pan, 9x5x3 inches. Bake in 390 degree oven, 45 to 50 min utes. Cool before serving. Peach Pie Qets Lattice Cruit ' Here is a family favorite of generations past and to come (as well as the present occu pants). A lattice crust fresh peach pie, pretty as can be, with strips of crisp crust woven across " a shell filled with sugared sliced peaches. Enjoy this delight now while peaches are still abundant. Six generous servings. For an extra special dessert, top with soft ice cream, pass a pitcher of cream or offer a bowl of dairy sour cream. 4 cups thinly sliced fresh peaches ' ' cups sugar 3 tablespoons quick-cooking tapioca Vi teaspoon salt Pastry for 2-crust 9-inch pie 2 tablespoons butter Make pie crust according to favorite recipe or from one of the popular pie crust mixes. Combine peaches, sugar, tapioca and salt. Turn Into a nine-inch pie plate lined with pastry rolled one-eighth Inch thick. Dot with butter or mar garine. Roll remaining pas try In a circle one-eighth inch thick. Cut into strips one-half inch wide. Arrange over pie in criss-cross fashion. Trim, turn under and flute edge. Bake in a preheated hot oven, 425 degrees, 40 minutes or until browned over the top. Dessert Topper A little allspice added to the whipped cream served over desserts such as rice or bread puddings or other custard-like desserts gives added flavor that puts these dishes in the extra-special class. Markets Feature Breakfast Specialties It is an Inescapable fact that better breakfast eaters are likely to get better report cards. A well-fortified father is likely to do a better job. Good nutrition Is an import ant aim to many parents (not nearly enough of them), edu cators and nutritionists alike and it starts with good breakfast habits. This means both planning an adequate meal and allow ing time enough to eat it. Boys and girls in high school need more' food than at any other time in their lives. Growing boys frequently eat twice as much as their fa thers; need an adequate breakfast tor maximum physical and mental efficien cy during late morning hours. Super markets offer break fast items galore both in ads and in special displays. Basic Breakfast There's no excuse for breakfast monotony. Three suggested patterns for good breakfast light, medium and hearty are (1) fruit, cereal or bread, milk to drink, other beverages if desired; (2) fruit, cereal or bread or both, egg, beverage; (3) fruit, cereal or bread or both, eggs with such meats as bacon, sausage or hash or fish, beverage. A pitcher of milk on the table. The light breakfast affords 25 per cent (33 per cent is recommended) of the day's necessary caloric and protein Intake. Lucky the child where an adequate meal is planned. Breakfast fruits are beyond counting orange, grapefruit, pineapple, apple, prune and many other Juices, fresh, canned and glassed; canta' loupe or other melon; apples, pears, peaches, nectarines, oranges, grapefruit. Hot Breeds. It is so easy to whip up fragrant pancakes or waffles from a package mix and to vary them in dozens of ways. Toasted English muf fins. Heated coffee cakes. Meat, Fish. Eggs. Consider bacon, ham, sausages which come in great variety, corned beef hash, chipped beef. There's quickly prepared cod fish cakes, herrings, mack erel. Eggs are jamb-packed with good nutrition; recom mended three to four times a week. Other Specials. There's su per abundance of turkeys. 13 fresh pears, late-s u m m e r vegetables, vegetable fats and oils, concentrated orange) juice. Watch this newspaper for food and grocery ads and check specials displayed throughout food stores. JACKSON COUNTY CO-OP Ready To Servo Your . . . HEATING OIL NEEDS Payment plan I Hi ttia family kyrff at AUTOMATIC RIFILl uy at tha Iff ti af tha Clrtla P . . . yavr kcal, farmarwnal Iviintut JACKSON COUNTY CO-OP rhenot: Bulk Plan 773-1464 Service Station 772-4730 SOBBING SIMS IS NOW OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY BIKE HORNS 49c BIKE SEAT COVERS 57c BIKE PUMP 1.98 NOW ONLY 1 FENCE WICKETS mal wt io '0 'is-' or OHNAUf NTA), OAUD r c wns ttaM veQ" WICKETS 17Vi" hiQh, 10" wide) RUST PROOF 10 GALVAN IZED STEEL. 44' WITH THIS AD HZAcc,8&Hobby Shp JUU VU4W 23 N. FIR 772-2472 Officers Elected By Employees Group Oliver Smeltz, Medford, was elected president of the Siskiyou chapter of the Ore gon State Employees associa tion at a meeting Monday evening. Others elected were Hay Robowskl, Medford, vice president; Mary Davis, Ash land, secretary-treasurer, and Al Converse, Ashland, dele-gate-at-large. Smeltz was also chosen as alternate delegate. The meeting was held at the Jackson county welfare office. Sale Josephine County will soil ono (1) 180 foot long, 18 foot wido stool span truss bridge in place to tho highest qualified bidder at ten o'clock A.M. en tho 25th day of September, 1962, at tha offices of the Board of County Commissioners, Crants Pets, Oregon. Said bridge i located across the Applogata River ap proximately 6 miles west of Grants Pass on Noill Road. The minimum bid considered will be $600.00. Specifi cations for removal can bo sscurod from Josephine County Board of County Commissioners, Courthouse, Crants Pass, Oregon. JOSEPHINE COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS LEA MOTORS OPEN 9 TO 9 '60 CHEVROLET Impal A Door Sedan. $1 QQQ R., H., Automatic transmission. Very nice I lit '60 MERCURY Monterey A Door Sedan. $1700 R., H., Automatic transmission. P. S., P.B I '60 RAMBLER Station Wagon $1 QQQ A Door. Automatic transmission. R., H. I 07 'AO RAMBLER Custom $1 CQQ A Door Sedan. R., H.,' Overdrive I O '59 RAMBLER American $QOQ 2 Door Station Wagon. Wheather-eye heater...... Jit '58 MERCURY Monterey A Door Sedan. $QQO R., H., Automatic transmission, P.S., P.B. , '57 FORD Ranch Wagon V-8 IHOO Automatic transmission. R. & H I Jf '57 CHEVROLET 210 Series A Door Sedan $QOO V-8, Automatic transmission. R. & H 57 OLDS A Door Hardtop "98" Series $1000 R., H., Auto., P.S., P.B., Power throughout I JmiJ '50 DODGE $00 Ton Pickup O 7 7, Look What You Can Buy for Only $499 $499 '57 DODGE 2 Door Sedan V-8 Engine, R., H., Automatic... '56 OLDS 88 $jOO A Door Hardtop. R., H., Automatic '56 FORD $IOO A Door Sedan. Automatic, R., H., V-8 Engine f 7 7 '56 PLYMOUTH 2 Door Station Wagon AQQ 6 Cylinder. Straight Stick Transmission r7 7 '55 MERCURY A Door Sedan $(00 Automatic with V-8 Engine r77 '55 BUICK A Door Hardtop $ AQQ R., H., Automatic H 7 LEA MOTORS 12TH and RIVERSIDE n i i -jviij, ''Pop" Werner , . . 1959 Ford 4-Door Sedan V-8, Radio, Heater, Automatic Transmission, One owner car. Very sharp. NOW ONLY $1299 RX mwm ... - v . eerareereeee e wmlft- Van Buren . . . 1958 Chevrolet Del Ray 2-Door Sedan, economical 6 cylinders, straight stick transmission, top condition. Very clean. YOURS FOR JUST $1199 fru i' "Moose"' Hale . . . 1959 Rambler Super 4I.Door Sedan. Radio, heater, Overdrive, Reclining Seats, Twin Bed teature, excellent ruD ber. Very low mileage. LOW, LOW PRICE $1499 , , - pi "Mac' Radio, ' McHenry . . . 1959 Rambler Super 4-Door Station Wagon. Heater, Standard Transmission. One owner, exceptionally clean. VERY LOW PRICE $1750 fee-.. a "Bud" Phlppi ... 1957 Chevrolet 210 Station Wagon. V-8 engine, Radio, Heater, Automatic Transmission, Power Steering, Power Brakes. Lovely cer. PRICED TO SELL - $1099