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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 5, 1963)
THURSDAY, Social Events Alba Show Will Open In Ashland , Ashland The 10 paintings on a cultural exchange program with Medford's sister city, Alba, Italy, will be exhibited in the Ashland public library beginning Monday, September 9. ' The public Is invited to view the pictures during library hours daily except Sundays from 10 am. to 9 p.m. The exhibit recently closed In the Medford Rogue Art gallery where it had been since mid' summer, when Dr. Enrico De Maria of Alba, opened the show on his arrival from Italy to spend some time in the Rogue valley. '-At the present time paintings done by artists of southern Ore gon are being shown in Alba on the exchange program. Quality of the Alba paintings is considered excellent. Done in oils the group includes repre sentational and non-i epresenta tional work. 4 Church Group Honors Woman Mrs. K. L. Mathewson was honored on her birthday anni versary September 1, by the congregation of the Foursquare church in the church annex. .-Those attending presented her with cards and gifts. Mrs. Dan Haas was in charge of games and refreshments for the evening. j Try this New 3'Bteji Plan to natural regularity Guaranteed to give you welcome aid or YOUR MONEY BACK 1 . Get 2 packages of UNCLE SAM at your favorite food store. 2, Eat 2 serving a day. Include ample liquids In your diet. 0 Finish both packages. You'll receive welcome aid . . . or your money back. If net tamplataly tatlilM, Mntf karti wraaaar topi la Unci Sam Iraakfait Paaa Ca Omaha, Nahe., far )raar rafvna'. PUNTY OF mi PARKING) SEPTEMBER S. 1M3 Lack of Nurses Subject For National Campaign New York The nursing pro fession, suffering from a chron ic shortage of numbers and low economic returns, will take its case to the public this fall in a nation-wide information cam paign. Titled, "Operation: Speak Up for Nursing," the publicity pro gram is being sponsored by the American Nurses' association, national profesional organization for registered nurses. It will alert the American people to the obstacles which hamper the pro- lesion s efforts to upgrade tne quaiity and quantity of nursing service available to the public. Given Impetus The campaign Is given impe tus by tne report, published in February, of a two-year study of nursing by the U. S. Surgeon General's Consultant Group on Nursing. Headed by Alvin C. Eu rich, Ph.D., vice president, the Fund for Advancement of Edu cation, Ford foundation, the Con sutlant Group on Nursing includ ed representatives from nursing service and education, medicine, hospitals, education, labor and civic groups. The report, "Toward Quality in Nursing," highlights problems contributing to the profession s current status, projects the na tion's nursing needs for the fu ture and recommends ways by A gasoline bath will brine back the sparkle of rhinestone pins. After the pins have soaked five minutes, rub the jewelry dry with a flannel cloth. Try this simple plan from UNCLE SAM CEREAL Tti. Mlilwii, mtfy-tc-Mt Mk4 of looit.d wtitli wfcMt IMm m tnitid wdol. NYLON PANIT W event mm Women's News which minimum needs may be met. ANA believes that all efforts will be unsuccessful without strong public support for meas ures to make nursing a profes sion competitive with others at- '-acting college bound young people. The association further cites the report to the Surgeon General which says, "In today's society, salaries and related ben efits not only determine stand ards of living but also influence the prestige of an occupation. Until the economic status of the imiaiiig piufeaaiuii is iuipruveti, nursing will be unable to com pete successfully with other fields where pay and benefits are more attractive." Square Dance Classes Open Square dance classes for be ginners will start Sunday, Sep tember IS from 2 to 5 p.m., and continue weekly on Sundays dur ing those hours, Byron Dibble, instructor has announced. The Star Promenaders club will spon sor the classes. Further information concern ing the location for the lessons and charges may be obtained from Mrs. Dibble, 773-6355 days, or 779-1801 after 5 p.m. Young persons from the age of 13 years will be accepted for the instruction. Partners should be arranged previous to the classes if pos sible, those in charge have point ed out. Stump Gallery Closing Nears Ashland The Stump Art gallery, Ashland, will close its second annual season Saturday, September 7. Paintings, prints, sculpture and pottery that have been gathered from the San Francisco Bay area and the Rogue valley are on exhibit. Tudor Guild Book Fair still offers a selection of books avail able at the Stump. To date over $300 has been collected to aid the Shakespearean Scholarship fund from the sale of these do nated books. -4 To Meet Get Together club will hold a potluck luncheon at the Girls Community club Friday, Sep tember 6, at 1 p.m. The Septem ber committee consists of Mrs. George Denny, Mrs. Edward 01 scn and Mrs. Lavina James. ICV'y Here's a fashion-labeled flotilla of fancy panties, priced to take home by the box-full. In 30 denier nylon, 40 denier nylon, Antron nylon, and nylon tricot satin. Take home enough for back-to-school and new fall ward robes . , . eaeMBBBaBBBBBBBBBBeaeeBBBBBjBBaBBBeaaBBaMMBBaaBBBMreajBi Calendar Calendar noticfaf ana new for the loutaty MCUon of The Mali Tribune mutt be submitted In wrltinc and deadline lor the Sun day edition la 1 p.m. Friday Dead line (or the weekly calendar la B a.m of the day of publication and for week day newg la a pjn. the day before publication. Thursday: 6 p.m. Crater Garden club, home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Taylor, Old Stage road, Cen tral Point. 6:15 p.m. Christian Business and Professional Women's coun cil. Rogue Valley Country club. 7:30 p.m. Valley Rogue Ex tension unit, home of Mrs. W. J. Skirvin, 1002 West Fourth street. 8 p.m. Adarel chapert, Or der of the Eastern Star, Jack sonville Masonic temple. 8 p.m. Mother of Twins club, Ping's restaurant. 8 p.m. Phoenix Neighbors of Woodcraft, Phoenix City hall. Friday: 12:30 p.m. Christian Wom en's club, Rogue Valley Coun try club. Benefit Square Dance Friday Shady Cove A benefit square dance will be sponsored by the Shady Squares dance club Fri day, September 6 in Derby school on Butte Falls road, six miles from Crater Lake high way. The Bean family of Prospect is to receive all the proceeds, club officers announced. Potluck refreshments will be served at the event which will begin at 8:30 p.m. Robert Gla thar will be master of ceremo nies. All callers and sq u a r e dancers interested are invited. Travelers Home From Japan Miss Nola Robbins and Stan- Icy Robbins, daughter and son of Mrs. Corinne Kane, 703 Bel mont street, arrived home last week from Tokyo, Japan where Ihcy spent the summer with their father, Capt. K. E. Rob bins. They were visited during Au gust by Miss Donna Childreth of Medford while she was on a tour of Japan. Miss Robbins is a Southern Oregon college student and Stan Icy Robbins is a sophomore at Medford High school. After using grits, corn meal or other items poured from a spout, tape the spout with a piece of cellophane tape. The ingredients will stay fresh longer. . .ijrjirnnijjfjiifJijjijiitii: X I z I i U I MEDFOKD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFOKD. OREGON Fair Queen Announced Salem Entering fair con tests has become a habit with Mrs. John Schweizer, Tillamook, Ore., who has been participating for the past 20 years. Wednes day, for the third year, Mrs. Schweizer was named "queen of the kitchen" at the Oregon State Fair, which means that her entries in the Foods depart ment competition scored the highest number of points and earned her the queen award a purple championship ribbon and a new electric range. Second place winner for queen honors went to Mrs. Pauline Vrji Dyke, Colton, who won a hotisserie; this is Mrs. Van Dyke's fourth year of competi tion. Third place winner, with a Mixmaster prize, went to Mrs. Leslie Kay, Coquille, and fourth prize, an Ostcrizcr, went to Mrs. Kenneth Hattrup, Grass Valley. This year's Oregon State Fair Foods department received 2,388 entries which came from over 200 exhibitors, the largest num ber of exhibitors and entries ever. Mrs. Mark O. Hatfield, wife of Oregon's governor, presented each winner with a bouquet of flowers and a purple champion ship ribbon. Fifty Plus Club Meeting Slated; Visitors Here A potluck luncheon and games and cards are planned for Med ford Fifty Plus club mem bers Friday, September 6 at 12 noon in St. Mark's Guild hall, Fifth street and North Oakdale avenue. The afternoon's enter tainment will close at 4 p.m. A business session will precede afternoon program. All interested persons are in vited to attend the club meet- inns. Further information may be obtained from L. C. Davis, 772-6314. At last week's meeting visit ors attended from California and Nebraska. Out - of - town guests who also are members of Golden Age clubs, have stated that by attending the var ious ciub gatherings, such as the Medford Fifty Plus club, they become better acquainted with the cities visited and their vacations are more enjoyable. Red Is Rolling Chicago (UPI) Amer ican manufacturers will literal ly roll out the red carpet this fall, highlighting new styles in this color family. At the International Home Furnishings market here, deep er, riclicr colors especially reds, greens and golds and more pronounced thick textures were shown for the autumn season. jj ! ' OPEN TONIGHT TILL 9 Salem Winner of the annual this year at the Oregon State Fair is Airs. John Schweizer, Tilla mook. Mrs. Schweizer is pictured here with Mrs. Mark O. Hat field, wife of (he Governor, who presented the winner a purple award rihlion end a bouquet of flowers, and Gerald Frank of Meier and Frank company who presented .Mrs. Schweizer a new electric range. Hurry Habit Says Hungarian Woman By GAY PAULEY UPI Women's Editor New York (UPI) The Amer ican habit of hurry is a conta gious one, a visitor from behind the Iron Cur- TMi.J tain finds. Su sie KormoczKy, Hungary's num ber one tennis player, observ ed that "I think I'm getting a little American. I find mvselt rush ing. You Gay Paule) k n o w, she said, "your mentality in Amer ica is so different from ours in Europe. You're so busy being busy you can't stop being busy. I am sure you are happy to be that way. But I would have trouble if I lived in America. I am not that fast." Miss Kormoczsky, on her sec ond tennis-playing visit to the United States, is one of 76 play ers from all the continents out side North America invited to compete in the amateur U.S. National Tennis Championships underway at Forest Hills, N.Y., stadium. The matches, with 300 entries from 35 countries, will continue through September 8. Likes Traveling Hungary and Czechoslovakia are the only Iron Curtain coun tries represented this year, the second year in which the privately-financed "People to Peo ple" project Sports Committee has invited foreign players to come to see the matches as its guests. Miss Kormoczky, who has been playing tennis for 30 of her 39 years, spoke strongly in fa vor of such exchanges of peo ples. "Whether in sports, or in oth er ways of life," she said, "the exchange of ideas . . . getting to know other peoples . . . this is good." Asked where she was when the bloody anti-Soviet revolt oc curred in Hungary seven years ago, she answered only, "in Budapest." She was reluctant to discuss politics or the living standard of her people today except to say that "life is very nice now. The people are living comfortably." Leaves Hnrnbrook Mrs. Evelyn Williams returned Tuesday to her home in Martinez, Calif., after spending the past month here as a house guest of a friend. M r s. Allie Tyrcr. To honor her friend, Mrs. Tyrer entertained at several dinner parties at her home. Out-of-town guests included Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wedin and Mike Tyrer, and Mrs. John Cooley, all of Yreka. To open clogs in steam iron holes, periodically use a cotton swab from the medicine chest. The soft tip can't mar the iron's surface. Serve this laMv main course r kLJ mils for a change In fall menus. And. since It has eve as well as appetite appeal. II also Is Ideal for a companv buffet. o Queen of the Kitchen contest Catching, The tennis star, a slim bru nette with hazel eyes and a height of only five feet, has been the top-ranked woman player of her country "for ages," she said. Grass Courts Strange She played in tournaments in St. Petersburg and Miami, Fla., in 1961, and through the years has played at Wimbledon, Cote D'Azur on the Mediterranean coast, in Rome, Hamburg, Prague, Paris, and Moscow, as well as in her native Budapest. She expressed worry of her showing at Forest Hills because, like many of the foreign guests, she will be playing on grass courts to which she is not ac customed. She is used to daily workouts on the clay courts not far from her house in the Hungarian capi tal. In private life, Miss Kormcz ky is the daughter of an archi tect and the wife of Goro San dor, a professor of medicine at the University in Budapest. The couple has one child, a 14-ycar-old girl who rapidly is develop ing into a competitive player, her mother said. Seafood Mold Makes Fall Menu Change Green Goddess Seafood Mold is a tasty main course salad and with a hearty soup and hot rolls will make a welcome change in early fall menus. Too, because of its attrac tiveness and appetite appeai, it is ideal for a company buffet. GREEN GODDESS SEAFOOD MOLD One package lemon-flavored gelatin; one and one-half tea spoons garlic salt; one-half tea spoon salt; dash of pepper; one cup hot water; one cup cold water; two tablespoons wine vinegar; one teaspoon chopped parsley; one-half cup diced cel ery; one-cup (six ounces) crab flakes; one and one-half cups (six ounces) diced lobster: one package lime - flavored gelatin; one and one-half teaspoons gar lic salt; dash of pepper; one cup hot water; three-fourth cup sour cream; one-fourth cup mayon naise; one tablespoon wime vin egar; one can (two ounces) an chovies, finely chopped. Combine lemon gelatin, garlic salt, salt, and popper. Dissolve in not water. Add cold water, vinegar, and parsley. Chill wntil slightly thickened. Then 'old in celery, crab flakes and lobster. Pour into a two-quart mold. Chill until almost firm. Meanwhile, combine lime gel atin, garlic salt, and pepper. Dissolve in hot water. Acid sour cream, mayonnaise, vinegar, and anchovies. Whip itniil well blended. Spoon mixture over layer in mold. Chill uniil lirm. L'nmold on crisp salad ;4."eons: garnish with tomato or egg quarters. Makes six or i-ight servings. salad with a hrarlv sonn and hoi I New Dust Mop Designed With Manv Accessories By MARGERY McELHENY Chicago (UPI) Designers of products for the home now have produced a dust mop "for the housewife who has nothing but needs everything." The mop is factory-equipped with 28 accessories and retails for $150. But it contains such es sentials as: a horn button for calling the children, a dinner bell for announcing meals, an air horn to scare the dogs or cats out of the way, a steering wheel for easier guidance of the mop around the furniture, a siren for emergency runs down long hallways, a radio, and baby bottle warmer. Oh yes, in a concession to practicality, the manufacturer has installed a reversible mitt mop head, zippercd to permit easy removal from the frame. The mop and 200,000 other items intended for the fall and Christmas selling seasons were shown to buyers at the recent National Housewares exhibit. A completely washable finish has been added to solid walnut salad bowls. Another manufac turer offers an epoxy enamel, said to dry harder than porce r A PRINCESS TELEPHONE IN YOUR OWN ROOM FOR ONE FULL YEAR.... Just come in and fill out an entry blank at our store. NO OBLIGATION -TONIGHT THRU SAT. ONLY (Restricted to Young ladies 13 thru 19) now the magic of DACRON is yours in a urn U.S. KEDS in a new, exclusive Dacroncotton blend Yc. llierc'j Dacron in our favorile new Kfdtlrndrd with your old friend, cnllnn! And il's no ordinary blend, hut onedeeloped ipecially Inr Red. Il Mnid the mooihnfj and rufyednefs of Darrnn and the rich "Ix'dv" of rollnn into one new. lu-lrou. leMure that wears Iiko mail, wa-hes like a dream, and m.ik- colors seem extra bright and clear I And with Ked- in ihi exclusive Da- roncotton. vou pet other ev lu. nves. too: KeH patented enmlort features. Keds unsurnjed hi. In .hort, THAT GRKAT KKDS FEELING! Get your Dacron cotton Kedj here today! Poinlcd toes, Nanow and Medium idih. Only MEDFORD SHOPPING CENTER lain, plus another finish de signed to outlast varnish threa to one. There are two-thumbed barbe cue mitts for quick changing from right to left hand use. A Christmas tree light set comes equipped with snap-in bulbs, and household light bulbs are available in simulated cut glass effect. A hair dryer boasts a hood-within-a-hood for drying without "hot spots." Even the dog is important to the housewares industry. One manufacturer introduced a dog dryer, designed for easy attach ment to any woman's electric hair dryer. Outdoor housewares included a variety of snow movers, toto cloth with handles for picking up yard debris, equipment stor age houses, and a fold-up port able grill which can hold a cof fee pot and two skillets simul taneously. For the playroom, there's a transparent hassock, air-filled to hold 500 pounds, with a built-in simulated aquarium. OPEN Monday and Friday till ft 0