PAGE TWENTY-TWO HERAUf AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2fl. Ili2 Light Your Corners With New Decorative Lamps Lump design has undergone thoroiiRh overhauling. Bom mod em end traditional forms have been revamped to highlight cur. rent decorating schemes. Homemakers shopping for new floor, table, and pinup lamps this imrfnir will find Hint modern has discarded Its utilitarian look. The functional structure remains, but It has developed softer, daintier lines. Light, tubular menu annus, variations, are dressed up with particularly In recurring tripod gleaming crystal balls or brass spirals. Traditional designs show the iniiuence 01 contemporary con cepts. There are clean-cut Inter pretations of Victorian vases and Provincial roosters, and simplified versions of 18th Century urns and Empire motifs. STUDIED To combine Imaginative styling with good lighting, designers have probed unusual sources of Inspir ation, ranging from modern mo bile sculpture to an old French sun dial. Wrought Iron Is used for lamps based on mobile sculpture those wiry abstractions that move with air currents to stimulate imagin ative Interpretations. Although sim ilar in shape, the lamps are sta tionary, and are therefore called "Stabiles." A typical example is fashioned from yellow and black wrought Iron, punctuated with a red dot, and topped with a burlap textured .shade. Lamps keep pace with every Electrical Cookery Easy Says Expert Showing folks how to cook elec trically is an old story to Grace Wells - who travels 1500 miles a month to 70 communities to demon strate the use of electricity In pre paring the family meals. Her' territory covers the area from Crescent City on the West to Cedarvtlle on the East; Oak land; Oregon on the North to Duns muir on the South. It takes eight weeks to reach all points on her itinerary. Mrs. Wells, on March 1st will start her 25th year of work with the California-Oregon Power Com pany. She came to Klamath Falls Dace In 1812, mamea a copco man. the late William Carleton Wells, was in the office at Chtlo quln as accountant and sales woman for eight years. For one year she served as cashier and floor girl in the Klamath Falls of fice, then assumed the responsibili ty of Home Service Director 15 years ago. SHOWS HOW Her work covers the entire area served by the company. She dem onstrates the use of electric cook ery to homemakers, salesmen, pub lic cooking schools, stores, theaters teaches Four-H summer classes at Corvallis, junior and senior high school classes when called. She carries her own cooking uten sils and can provide her own reci pe for Just about- everything from corn chowder to peppermint chip chiffon cake. - fncet of the home furnishings scene. A casual eflert is stressed in open black Iron forms, warmly finished fruitwood, and ceramics contrasting colorful "drip" glazes with dull, earth-toned backgrounds. One collection of Informal lamps, called the "Scientific Age." in cludes a sun dial that actually works when placed in a sunny pic ture window; apothecary scales that balance: an hour class filled with sand, as well as telescopes, These are made of wood and metal and have shades depicting maps of the world or signs ot the Zodiac. UNUSUAL Primitive art and native handi crafts, increasingly important in accessorizing today's homes, are well represented. Delving into the highly developed art forms achieved bv the Mavan Indinns nf Cenral America, one manufactur er has introduced a group of sculp tured pieces, including a sun god and a warrior head, intricately carved in the round and treated to look like stone that has iust been dug out of archaelogtcal ruins From Ttfllv rnnin f-prnmii- hn. hand-crafted in simple, contempt orary shapes, which reveal an inti mate feeling for the material. Light, airy Scandinavian motifs, in sunny colors, are featured in both imported and domestic lamps made from ceramics and china. Just as modern furniture has been lifted off the floor and adopt ed a "suspended" look, lamps are now raised from the table by open iron stands or tapered wooden legs. Even traditional vases, dec orated in metallic gold and silver, are propped oy iron supports mat give them a light, floating appear ance and make them appropriate for today's homes. RETURNING Because Empire furniture is en joying a revival, many lamps are styled for rooms decorated in this period. Electrified table candelabra are shown in stritcine combinations of black and gold. An outstanding Empire floor lamp has a fluted black column, which culminates in a gold-wreathed crystal ball. In height, floor lamps are scaled down, some as short as 52 inches, in proportion to lower ceilings and furniture settings. Table lamps av erage between 28 and 34 inches. mPfl in i r ---; m :. V '-j ( V Vh rri MA M" M LAMPS TODAY ARE AS DIFFERENT from-the lumps of 1951 as the bustlo is from the silhouette of today. These three examples will add that modern touch that brings rooms out of the category "ordinary." (Left) a polished brass seagull is gracefully poised on a limed oak base. (C(enter) Open wire-form stand gracefully supports this new, modern table lamp. An egg-crate diffuser over the bulb permits light to flow . upward. (Right) Star pattern in the glass shade creates a twinkling effect when this new black torchicre is lighted. Leftover ham or tongue can be used in a casserole dish with spa ghetti, rice, or macaroni, com bined with a can of undiluted to mato soup, grated Cheddar cheese and topped off with crumbled shredded wheat biscuit. Bake in the oven of your modern gas range at 353 degrees for 45 min utes. Good I Tele-fun by Warren Goodrich to "Next time you order lettuce for our dinner, look up the correct number!". . . Memory often plays tricks ... so look up numbers you're not sure of before you call . . . Pacific Telephone. v j , r; CEXTER OF THE U.S.A. When you're smack in the middle of the U.S.A., you're Sure to be in Smith County, Kanul. And when you smack your lips in the midiUr of a whiskey drink, you can be Sure it was made with Seagram's 7 Crown . . . Seagram's finest American whiskey. 0 Seagram's IJH THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY SALE 7th and Main in Klamath Falls 27c MINERAL OIL 17 DIWT BATTir AT A &AVINCS1 f 1.1 mil n Bunt f)iiMl'. Unnruniiiiii PINT BOTTLE AT A SAVINGS! (Limit ii viibnuunu DROPS 9. Mc. 8-ounrei , 19' WOODBURY 3 for 1Q r-AUAL iUAr Keg. iize HYDROGEN PEROXIDE 1fic 29 PINT BOTTLE SALE PRICED! (Limt. i) IV Pint ?0V fttltiol txtii Tatt on ToiUtiloi, lugrram and lilliuM Seagram's 7 Crown. Blended Whiskey. 86.8 Proof. 65 Grain Neutral Spirits. Seagram-Distillers Corp., N.Y. K.rKI y vim .. F ...P.P., c,..l F,.,.. ti,.wk.,,l.i . II I U T' fJm . fxak. I A P"A1 I nd there's not a speck of waste! YOUR GROCER v4t lf I I tf i HAS FLAV-R-PAC STRAWBERRIES, MEDO-LAND f i lr II M Jf J WHIPPING CREAM AND CAKES NOW! 11 J Nothing tastes so good es Strawberry Shortcake topped with Medo-Land "Gwaranteed.to.WhlD" Whlnnlna Cram. Fn.u in liv with Fin v. P. Pur r rr - . - - - - jjj . IMNII J -l! 1 U I II C. I , ,L. .... I. I & i.wii imrtnau .jTrawDvrris rne swevieiT, uicivit uernvs you can buy. Strawberry Shortcake is a lost, easy treat to fix when you use Flav-R-Pac Fresh Frozen Strawberries . and there's not a speck of waste! YOUR GROCER HAS FLAV-R-PAC STRAWBERRIES, MEDO-LAND WHIPPING CREAM AND CAKES NOW I RUBBER GLOVES r?fff. 65c QQC ri(-n(e . JJ . 35c MOTH BALLS 100 Refined Noplholeme MOTH CAKES m SPONGE & CHAMOIS Specie Ode $1.79uoDl 19c lib. , APEX killi laivae, loo , , ..ZD 03 Blfchtd & Pn-thrunk 6 DISH TOWELS 18x30-lnchtri. H 09 $1.7 J ptk, now JL Hemmed., ready louse iV DISH UJ Y CLOTHS Jt FAB i 29C J It's Ovtnpreafl 39' DEEP LOAF PAN 59. v. OQe wr uampnoraieo II Ktf (Limit 1) JTT I lilr CI no tlllJ n. iroru I ii ii in - in 1 1 l . Ma. -. f Lustre Creme C w Shampoo S lg 4 ox. No-Splaih SAeW JL R7c & 69c BATH HL -Jffl SPRAY Dandrulf R.movtr & TAMPAX gl P Shampoo O Sanitary pritiitlon J9m r 5 ox. Sixe worB internally. &t L 37c Jlk, 39 jtf ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES SLASHED "jiSll SWIFTY FRY-IT Automatic Eloctric Deep Fryer Price Fixed at 29.50 189 SAVE 9.61 TREMENDOUS SAVINGS STEAMOMATIC 1 IRON 1 Price fixed at 19.95 I ' You Save 6.00 MORE SAVINGS Wolgrcon has it! Genuine G.E, $23.00 Auto matic Pop-Up Toaster. 89 1 XT' SMOKERS' DUO BOTH 4 69 PI m Best ' Plastk-Coattd Cards 89 DIXONIA'S Long-wear, wiy clean hnisn . . . Only 79C DOUBLE DECK 1.55 7M Runt for Hours K-H Elec. VAPORIZER 495 Stftty thut-olf Smart, Sturdy ZIPPER BAG BUY Rtgulsr 4 69 at $3.39 . L Htlf.Prlt Barglnl 2 CHERAMY SKIN BALM Smoothtil A $1 PINT botttt . . . I Prophylactic "PRO 59" TOOTH BRUSH S9( 13" by IS-tttt ALUMINUM FOIL BUY Regular OOc 39c.box.Ou fl-oi. Beautiful Hair BRECK SHAMPOO