Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, November 06, 1963, Image 9

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    The Rev. Robert W. Tull, (at left), Mr. Tull
and Gatewood Smith are shown here during a
reception last Sunday afternoon at the Smith
home on' West Tenth Street. The reception
honored Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McCamant,
former Medford residents who spent the week
FDA Repeats Information
Regarding Fish Products
At the reauest of the nation's
fishing and fish products indus
try the Food and Drug Admin
istration today reaffirmed that
its recommendations of Friday,
October 25, regarding smoked
'fish apply only to fish caught
in the Great Lakes area or
smoked in plants in the Great
Lakes, area.
FDA re-emphasized that its
advice to housewives to destroy
such products does not apply
to smoked fish from other areas
or to fresh, frozen, pickled or
canned fish.
FDA said the smoked varie
ties which have been associated
COFFEE
CUP
AT BAMBY'S
AT THE BIG Y
THURS, FRL,
SAT. and SUN.
stockings and parity girdle
imply map together
made for
fastening"
Legsize:
beige or
Your Charge
Main and Bartlett Sts. 1
end here in order that thy might attend the
ground-breaking ceremonies held by Medford
Congregational Church for a new edifice. TJie
Rev. Mr. Tull is pastor of the church, and Mr.
McCamant formerly held the pastorate.
with recent occurrences of bo
tulinus poisoning in Kalama
zoo, Mich., and in the Knox
ville - Nashville, Tenn., area
are whitefish and chubs. An
earlier botulinus case involved
smoked ciscoes. The FDA warn
ing also applied to other var
ieties of smoked fish processed
in Great Lakes area plants be
cause the type E botulinus or
ganism has been found in the
products from three of these
plants.
Five of the seven recent
deaths from botulism from
smoked fish Involved vacuum
packed products in plastic but
two other deaths involved
smoked whitefish which appar
ently had never been packaged.
For this reason the FDA warn
ing covered both packaged and
unpackaged products. It does
not, however, involve canned
fish of any kind.
FDA said it was glad to re
peat the information previously
given because of reported mis
understanding by c o n s u mers
which has adversely affected
the market for fish products
generally.
'by'
TV MEDFORD J
THE NEW Ky
"ALL TOGETHER' L A
LOOK Of ft
ml
J
Belle-Sharmeer
Kev panty girdle and stockings are
each other. Unique snap
eliminates garter gaps and
bumps. You're smooth as a whistle!
from waist to-toe. Nylon and Lycra
panty girdle pins 3 pair of sheer seamless
stretch stockings, $10.95. Separate
stockings, $1.95 pair. In your perfect
Brev, Modite or Duchess. In
black.
BELLE-SHARilEEE SPOKEN HERE
Account Invited! Ride 'n
1 MT!fr i"z mt'tttx&
Dancers Invited
To Saturday Event
All interested valley square
dancers and callers are invited
to attend a Buckles and Bows
Club dance Saturday, November
9 beginning at 8:30 p.m., in
County Squares, Colver Road,
Talent.
Floyd Workman will call and
potluck refreshments will be
served.
Leave
HORNBROOK - Mr. . and
Mrs. Opal Rose left Tuesday
for their home in Los Angeles
after visiting here for the past
week with their daugther and
her family, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Riant and Joanie and David.
Accompanying the Roses were
her brother-in-law and sister,
Mr. and Mrs. Clovis Patton,
Ulendale Calif.
Bulb Forcing Time
You can have spring indoors
this January if you start in Sep
tember and October to force
hyacinths, daffodils and tulips
in clay pots. For forcing, pick
the low, squatty types of clay
pots known as bulb pans. They
are wider than they are high
and the larger sizes can accom
modate several of the same
types of bulbs.
Shop Member!
' Phone 772-6428
V
1
MEDFORD
Homemakers
WASHINGTON - Latent in
many a housewife s heart is
the desire for an "old-fashioned
family kitchen" in a new home.
Many also want no part of a
garage directly facing the
street, which has been de
scribed as a "gaping, toothless
mouth" when the doors are left
open.
These are some ot the im
pressions gained from discus
sions at housing seminars held
in five cities under the auspices
of the National Association of
Home Builders and House and
Garden magazine.
About 30 representative wo
men attended the seminars' in
each of the cities Portland,
Ore.; Los Angeles, Calif.; Fort
Worth, Tex.; Washington, D.C.;
and Cincinnati, 0.
Not all of the women agreed
on their preferences in housing
and, naturally, tastes in many
cases were patterned after the
geographical areas in which
they lived.
wants rantnei
However, some other general
impressions gained from the
seminars were these:
There was an almost unani
mous wish expressed for the
old-fashioned walk-in pantry."
There was surprisingly little
clamour for more baths. But in
Princess
Student At
Radcliffe
By KARINA ENEBERG
United Press International
STOCKHOLM (UPI) As a
one-year-old baby, Princess
Christina of Sweden gave a
magazine photographer such a
hard time he reported to his
boss that the royal infant was
"very ugly and terribly wild."
Now, at 20 and a student at
Radcliffe College, Cambridge
Mass., this fall, Christina still
is no raving beauty, but she
is neither ugly nor wild. She
is the first member of Swedish
royalty to study in the United
States.
Swedes predict confidently
that the Radcliffe girls will find
Christina completely charming
In looks she is not a typical
Nordic. She does have bright
blue eyes but her hair is too
darkly blonde, and her face too
wide.
Like most European princess.
es of today, and especially those
a ii i. m I-.! i-
oi avanuinHviH, nriaiina la
thoroughly and genuinely dem
ocratic. She hides from, rather
than seeks publicity. Gay and
out-going,' she was highly pop
ular among classmates at the
French School in Stockholm
which she left last spring.
Serious Student
She is regarded as a good
student and a serious one. Mu
sic is her great interest and her
tastes run to the classical. She
is a proficient piano player, a
talented ballet dancer and crit
ics who have seen her perform
say that with more training she
easily could become i profes
sional.
Christina also is a good
sportswoman. She has never
been seen playing tennis
"the" game of the Swedish roy
al family but she is an excel
lent skier and for years was
an enthusiastic figure-skater.
There has been no explana
tion of why Christina broke
with a tradition by studying in
the United States, although
friends have suggested she is
anxious to get away from sur
roundings in which she con
stantly is reminded of her royal
birth.
The princess has said only
that she is "happy" to be going
to Radcliffe. Swedish newspa
pers seeking interviews were
refused.
Christina is the youngest of
the late Crown Prince Carl Gus
tav's four daughters. She is not
in the line of succession to the
throne because the Swedish
constitution rules out succession
by a woman.
Threats Rarely
Help Alcoholic
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPD-
The bluff and the threat rarely
help to solve the problem of an
alcoholic in the family, says a
University of Michigan psychi
atrist. Dr. Robert A. Moore, of the
UM medical center, said that
often one partner In the mar
riage feel that threats of di
vorce or separation will force
the alcholic into treatment.
Such bluffs are seldom success.
ful, he believes, and may make
future rehabilitation more dif
ficult. "If the alcoholic suffers the
loss of family ties, the hope for
recovery may be diminished,
he wrote in the Journal of the
Michigan State Medical Soci
ety.
'"The victim may think the
bottle is his only remaining
source or gratification.
Dr. Moore laid the family
should assist in pointing the al
coholic in the right direction to
ward treatment, without bluffs
but with realistic concern and
Insistence. In some cases, aid
from employers and even court
MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD,
Say They Would Like Old-Fashioned
several of the cities a wish was
expressed for a children's halt
bath near i mud-room kind of
entrance.
Nearly everyone agreed the
laundry equipment should not
be in the kitchen, but there
was no unanimity as to where
it should be.
On the dining-room question,
it was felt that many women
are seeking a flexible kind of
living-dining area mat could
fulfill several functions with a
minimum amount of shifting
things about.
In considering the kitchen,
not many of the women used
the term "old-fashioned family
kitchen," but those conducting
the seminars got the impression
that it is exactly what many,
many women covet a space
in which all sorts of family
activities, including cooking,
could be pursued easily and na
turally. The idea of an island counter
work area in the kitchen was
more enthusiastically received
in the Western cities.
Entrance Hall Listed
Most of the women also want
windows reasonably uniform in
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OREGON
size and an entrance hall or
foyer that provides "a gracious
place" for greeting guests.
Virtually every woman in
every city wanted an entry hall
or foyer that would not only
provide a pleasant area to
greet guests, but would be fully
screened from the rest of the
house, and provide adequate
storage space for coats, um
brellas and other personal
things.
Most of the women opposed
extremes in the style or de
sign of houses in neighborhoods.
They said they did not want to
live in precise look-alikes but
neither did they want to live in
neighborhoods of conflicting
architectural designs. A Port
land woman neatly summed up
this discussion by saying that
she liked the idea of homes in
a given neighborhood to have
"the same general feeling."
In each of the seminars, the
discussions began with the
neighborhood, the exterior of a
house and then went through
a hypothetical house room by
room. A detailed analysis of the
housing likes and dislikes ex
pressed will be a feature pres
You're surrounded by clean and quiet warmth
when you heat your home electrically. Every room is the exact tem
perature you wish. Flameless. electric heat is as clean as sunshine
itself-no grimy walls or drapes. And just as silent, too-no noisy
furnace startups.
And think of the extra benefits you enjoy with electric heat! Less
redecorating bills! No furnace maintenance costs! No wonder electric
heat is becoming so popular, especially here in the Northwest where
PP&L rates are far below the national average.
entation at the 20th anniver
sary Convention Exposition of
the National Association of
Home Builders, December 10
through 15.
Like Courtyards
The seminars revealed that
there is a difference of opinion
on the desirability of the front
yard. To some, a handsome,
well-tended front yard still
seems to be a "status symbol."
But others, particularly in the
Western cities, considered the
old-fashioned front yard a waste
of precious land. The "walled
courtyard Idea" made sense to
many. They stressed that they
wanted their main outdoor liv
ing area at the rear of the
house. But so did many other
women in all the cities.
A master bedroom with a
"living room look" was also
popular. Many of the partici
pants wanted this room to be the
"parents' retreat" for reading,
writing, watching TV, or keep
ing the family 'accounts.
A bedroom for each child,
with desk and ample storage
space, was also a part of nearly
every woman's dream house.
Members of the National As
You Live Better. ..Electrically!
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER C, 19S3
Kitchen, Pantries
sociation of Home Builders,
who will get a breakdown of the
housing preferences at their
Save Time . .
USE OUR
Wash-Dry-Fold
CASH AND CARRY
8 Pounds M
Only V
Each Additional Pound 9c
Drop oft your laundry on your way to work. Pick
it up In th avanlng. Bring your dry claaning, too.
Dumas Domestic Laundry
and Dry Cleaners
30-32 N. Riverside Medford
USE OUR DRIVE-IN SERVICE
"Nothing Makai Clothei ai Claan ai a Laundry"
A 9
i Chicago Convention, will use
the data as guides in drawing
I plans for their 1964 new homes.
. Gas . . . Coins
CONVENIENT
Service
action are required, he nid.