8 The News-Review, Rosebjrj, Ore. Wed., Stpt. 14, 1949 By LOTUS KNIGHT PORTER NOTICE Social Items submitted by tele phone for the society page must be turned In before 12 o'clock Monday through Thursday and by 10 a. m. Friday at whkh time the social calendar and bat urday'i tociety page are closed weekly. DEDICATION OF COLORS CEREMONY It ANNOUNCED Roseburg chapter, American Gold Star Mothers Inc., has In vited the public to attend the ded ication of colors service to be held at eight o'clock Tuesday night, Sept. 20, at the armory. All patriotic organizations in Roseburg (both men and women) are asked to bring their colors and participate in the ceremony and are also requested to attend a special practice meeting at 2 p.m. at the armory Tuesday to complete arrangements for the evening ceremony. RECEPTION TO HONOR ATTORNEY AND MRS. RICE ON GOLDEN WEDDING. Attorney and Mrs. Dexter Rice will observe their golden wed ding anniversary at a reception Sunday afternoon and evening. Sept. 18, at their home at 241 S. Kane street Relatives and friends are most cordially invit ed to call between two-thirty and five o'clock in the afternoon and seven-thirty and ten o'clock in the evening.' TWO-DAY RUMMAGE ALE TO BE HELD A two-day rummage sale will be sponsored by the women of the First Presbyterian church Friday and Saturday, Sept. 16-17, in the basement of the church. Members and friends are being .solicited for donations, which may be left at the church Sept. 15. or will be picked up by calling either Mrs. Armour Murdock, S35-Y or Mrs. S. J. Shoemaker, 1L. Your Candy Center Is San ford's Candy Kitchen Delicious, Nutritious ' Horn Made Candy 125 West Cass COMPLETE Highway 99 N. flour honey mm LIBBY'S Royal Puddings mm Von Comps Pork & Beans no 2Vi Tm !:3L 21c Libby's Bartlett PEARS No. 2Vi Tin 29c Chevy Chose Strawberry Preserves ,.ib 29c Peter Pon Peanut Butter 12-oz. Tumbler 29c Apple Juice qmi... Gerber's Baby Foods PUREX va go. 23c GOD'S 9. And the third angel followed them, saving with a loud voice. If any man worship the beast and his Image, and receive his mark In his forehead, or in his hand. 10. The same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God, which is poured out without mixture Into the cup of his Indignation; and he shall be tormented with fire and brimstone In the presence of the holy angels, and In the presence of the Lamb: Revelation 14:9, 10 GOLD STAR MOTHERS ASKED TO MAKE RESERVATIONS FOR MEET All members of Roseburg chap ter, American Gold Star Mothers Inc., planning to attend the in stallation of officers meeting at Coos Bay, Sept. 19, are asked to make arrangements for transpor tation by calling Mrs. Martha Wells or Mary Lou Newhouse. Also, members desiring to at tend tha state election and In stallation of officers at Tilla mook, Sept. 2, are asked to make reservations by calling Mrs. Wells or Mrs. Newhouse. FOOD, FANCYWORK AND RUMMAGE SALE DATED A food, fancywork and rum mage sale will be sponsored by the Seventh Day Adventist Dor cas society Thursday, Sept. 15, in the building formerly occupied oy the Saddle shop, across the street from the Saleway parking lot on Main street. Proceeds of J he sale will go to the building fund for an auditorium to be built at the church school. TEACHERS TO BE HONORED AT FIRST FALL MEETING OF CLUB The Dixonvllle Community club will hold its first fall meeting Friday night. Sent. 16, at eight o'clock at the community hall, at wnicn time a reception win dc given In honor of the Dixonvllle teachers. Dale Owens is president of the club. All residents of the community are invited. Refresh ments will be served. RIVERSOALE GRANGE TO MEET FRIDAY NIGHT Rlversdale Grange will meet Friday night at eight-fifteen o' clock at the hall for a "Back to School" program. Those attend ing are asked to wear appropri ate costumes in keeping with the firogram theme. Women, attend ng are asked to bring sack lunch for two. EPISCOPAL RUMMAGE SALE TO BE HELD' Women of St. George's Episco pal church will sponsor a rum mage sale Saturday, Sept. 17, I from nine o'clock in the morning until two o'clock in the after j noon. Members and friends hav i ing donations are asked to bring them to the parish hall on East Case street where the sale will I be held. FOOD SHOPPING CENTER Roseburg FREE PARKING! Gold Medal or Drifted Snow 25-lb Sack 50-lb. Sack $J89 Bradshaw's Fancy 5-lb. Pails Stock up at this price Blue Shield California Small White Navies 2-lb. bag ED BEEF 5c pkg. 19c 6 for 45c 39c Gal.. WORD 8UTHERLIN GRANG3 MEETS WEDNESDAY Sutherlln Grange met Wednes day evening at the hall for pot- luck dinner. The meeting was op ened by the master, fcldon ban ders. The master appointed officers for the Sutherlln Folk Dancing club. The workings of the dance club were more fully explained. The next dance to be held at the Grange hall will be Saturday eve ning, Sept. 17th, at 8:30 o'clock. Hostesses for this affair are: Mrs. Dorothy Clark, Mrs. Lois Riemenschneider and Mrs. Erma Buck. Agriculture chairman, Charlie Wahl, gave a very interesting and complete report on the use of lime. The Grange Church Sunday this year Is to be Sunday, Sept. 25th, and win be neid at the Baptist church, which is held at Grange Hall at 11 a.m.. to be fol lowed by a basket lunch with the members of the congregation in vited to join. Mrs. Maude Moore was elected and installed as lecturer. Roy Ni- coson was elected as a member of the executive committee. A clever program, put on by the lecturer, was enjoyed. Group singing louowed. Those present to enjoy the pot luck dinner and meeting were: Master and Mrs. tldon Sanders, Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Wahl, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Gleason, Mr. and Mrs. Velvie Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Moore, Mr. and Mrs. George Shamp, Mrs. Hallle Mar tin, Mrs. Vivian Nlcoson, Mrs. Ellen Leisinger, Mrs. Ella Weg ner, Mrs. Kitty Graham, Mrs. Kay Simmons, Mrs. Gertrude Bringle and Clyde Henderson. ELKHEAD GRANGE HAS INTERESTING MEETING Elkhead Grange met in regular session Wednesday night at the hall. During the social hour which lollowed. a delicious lunch was served. Plans were made to hold a Grange booster meeting Oct. 2nd, with a pot luck dinner at noon. There will be a program. Evervone is invited to enjoy this occasion. BETA SIGMA PHI CITY COUNCIL TO MEET Beta Sigma Phi City Council will meet at a twelve o'clock no hostess luncheon Thursday, Sept. 13. at the Hotel umpqua. Al! Council members are requested to be present. GREEN P.-T.A. STUDY CLUB TO MEET TUESDAY The Study club of the P.-T.A. of Green school will meet Tues day, Sept. 20, at a noon pot luck luncheon at the home of Mrs. John Wllhite. All mothers and friends In the community are in vited. 27c 239t Spud Salad Special BEST FOODS MAYONNAISE PT. 37c QT. 63c CD CC f f Reip Booklets 12 new way, t. lCC make Potato Salad POTATOES 1(L 39C LUNCH BOX SPECIAL Best Foods Pt. 37c Delicious Sandwich Spread Qr. 63c Biltmore Tuna Morsels n0 r,T n 29c AMERICA'S MOST POPULAR MARGARINE NUCOA X,:::::::::: ::SU Preferred" By Million! MELROSE GRANGE HAS MEETING TUESOAY NIGHT At the last Melrose Grange meeting last Tuesday evening, Mr. and Mrs. L. V. Newport were given the 1st and znd degree ob ligation and welcomed as new members. A vote of appreciation to the fair booth committee was given. Legislative chairman, D, N. Busenbark, discussed the C. V.A. measure and the stand ta ken by the state county courts. Following the business meeting a short plav on fire prevention was presented by ine lollowlng: Pat Doerner, Dickie Kettleman, Irene Busenbark, Amy Matthews, Becky Chltwood, Bertha Farman and Arnold Patterson, The atage was very attractively decorated to represent a garden enclosed by a stone wan. mis was ar ranged by Becky Chltwood. Committee for the evening was Mr. and Mrs. Woodruff, Mr. and Mrs. Kettleman. and Mr. and Mrs. Reece, who served refresh ments to the following: Mr. and Mrs. Ray Doerner, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Farman and sons, Mr. and Mrs. Clarson Chitwood and sons. Mr. and Mrs. D. N. Busenbark, Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Busenbark, Mr. and Mrs. L. V. Newport, Mr. and Mrs. O. O. Matthews, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Goff, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kreuger, Mr. and Mrs. Lou is Nichols, Mayme Pickens, Irene Busenbark, Martha Cring, Alma Greer, Caroline Stldham, T. B. Busenbark, Arnold and Donald Patterson, Ruby Matthews, Ruth Simmons, Amy Kruse, Nellie Meyers and Margaret Aydelotte. P.E.O. SISTERHOOD TO MEET AT POTLUCK LUNCHEON ON FRIDAY Chapter BI, P.E.O. Sisterhood will meet Friday, Sept. 16, at a twelve-thirty o'clock pot luck luncheon at the summer home of Mrs. Clair K. Allen, end of Fisher road. Those attending are asked to bring their own table service. Dessert and coffee will be furnished. ANNUAL REUNION OF CO. O. TO BE HELD Companv D, 162nd Infantry of World War II will hold its annual reunion at the Canyonville Com munity hall at an eight o'clock buffet chicken supper. Members are asked to bring their wives or lady friends. DILLARD TEACHERS TO BE HONORED AT RECEPTION A recption honoring the teachers of the Dillard school will be held Friday evening at eight o'clock at the school. The new auditorium will be open for the meeting. Special music has been arranged and refreshments will be served. BOYERS MEAT MARKET Specials for Fri. & Sot. BACON Slab Light & medium Weight 49' lb. LUNCH MEAT Assorted1 43c lb. Sirloin Steak. 63e ib. Veal Chops 65c lb. Beef Roast 44c lh Short Ribs 28c Bacon Jowels 27c lb. Ib. Lard 14c S-lb. can.. lb. REAL DOUBLES MEET DOUBLES Frsncls Geerce (left), Louis, meet more twins. Guernsey calves one day old, at the Illinois slate rsir tn sprint ntia. What It Means: Clothing Price WASHINGTON Signs in t h e windows of men's shops lately have reminded you of the good old days. "Midsummer clearance!" Everything Drastically Slash ed:" Not in 10 years have the men's stores run such sales and offered so many bargains. It s enough to make you won der whether the haberdashery market have cracked. It's a visit with the experts in the Comm erce and Labor acpartmcnis, however, that tones down your hopes, To them the big mldsum mer sales represent lust one more Dost war readtustment and are no indication that prices of men's clothing will drop sharply in the near future. Sales have fallen off a little In the past year 7 per cent in dol lar volume, according to i n e Federal Reserve Board. This seems to have worried the store keepers. They still had a lot of goods leit over irom ine war ano postwar days. They wanted to un load tnem oeiore siocKing up on new aunolies.. Manufactures' prices for new merchandise are mot likely to de cline very fast in the opinion of Commerce Department spec ialists. The prices of the two big elements that make up clothing prices fabrics and labor a r e fairly stable and are likely to remain so. The garment trades are strongly unionized, and the unions are likely to hold firmly against any severe cut in wages. While there has been consider able reduction In prices of some fabrics, materials which are I n heaviest demand have dropped very little. Nevertheless, the general trend of the prices of men's clothing, as well as of women's, is down ward. The consumers' price in dex of the Bureau of Labor Stat istics (BLS1 discloses this. The price of all apparel reached its peak last October. Between September 1948 and June 1949 the price of apparel dropped 5.3 per cent. This decline was in line with the price trends of other items which consumers buy. Between September and June food dropp ed 5.1 per cent and house fur nishings 5.5 per cent. Rent i s the only item which has not gone down in fact, it is steadily ris ing. The BLS figures show that the cost of women's clothing has dropped taster than that of men's. Between September and June the price of women's clo thes fell 7.6 per cent. Men's fell 2.4 per cent. The reason is main ly that men's clothes are made largely of wool and the price of wool fell comparatively little. But cotton, silk and rayon, the materials from which most wo J men's clothes are made, fell al most three to four times as much as wool. The same factors have affect ed some items in the men's de partment. Men's pajamas have lallen more than any other item in the apparel line 13.5 per cent in the September to June period. Shorts, shirts and overalls have also taken a considerable tum ble. Cheese Souffle Easy For Holiday By GAYNOR MADDOX NEA lullWnur Expecting a houseful of guests over the week-end? Then take a look at these unusually flavored recipes. They'll make everyone happy and boost your reputation as a hostess. Melted Cheess Souffla (6 servings) Four tablespoons butter or for tified margarine, 4 tablespoons flour, 1-2 cup evaporated milk, 1-2 cup beer, 1 1-2 cups grated American Cheddar cheese, few grains cayenne, 4 eggs, separat ed. Melt butter or margarine In top of double boiler. Add flour; blend thoroughly. Add milk and beer all at once. Cook over hot water, stirring constantly, until thickened. Add cheese and cay enne. Stir over very low heat un til cheese is melted: remove from heat. Stir a little of the sauce into the slightly beaten egg yolks. Stir into remaining sauce. Beat egg whites until stiff but not dry. Fold into cheese mix ture. Pour into a greased 1 1-2-quart casserole. Bake in a slow oven IJOO degrees t.) l i nuurs. Serve Immediately. Crabmeat Suprems ' ( 3to 4 servings) One can condensed tomato soup, 1-2 cup beer, 1 cup grated American Cheddar cheese, 1 ta hlpsnnon cornstarch. 2 table spoons cold water, 2 cups flaked crabmeat (fresh cooked or cart- ned two 7-ounce cans), 1 cup buttered soft bread crumbs. Combine tomato soup, beer and cheese. Stir over low heat until cheese melts. Blend cornstarch with cold water: add, stir con stantly until thickened. Add crab meat; mix wen. rour mio imt klns. Top with crumbs and addi tional grated cheese if desired. Brown under broiler. Star-Gazer Complaint Of Searchlights In Sky DETROIT Detroit's city council is seeing what can be done for the benefit of star-gazers. C. J. King, a citizen, complain ed about the searchlights which play across Detroit's skies. The sky. he said, is "so much prettier the way God designed it." "I realize business comes first and all that sort of thing." King wrote the council, "but please let us look at the stars once in a while." Mrs. Charles A. Brand Teacher of Singing Voice Building, Song Interpretation Maionla Building Fill Trm Fhon 336-R SptmlMr 1, and his twin. Martin, of SL Radio Givt-Awayi Get Temporary Injunction CHICAGO, Sept. 14 ( Radio giveaway programs got at least a temporary new lease on life. Federal Judge Michael L. Igoc Tuesday issued a temporary or der preventing Interference with such programs until the issue is settled in the federal court of New York. The Federal Communications Commission which declined com ment on the ruling had banned such programs effective Oct. 1. Subsequently, the Columbia Broadcasting company, the Na tional Broadcasting company and American Broadcasting company filed suit in New York challeng ing the order. Judge Igoe'i ruling puts the is sue In the lap of the New York court. Until the point Is settled there, the mushrooming give away programs can go their lush way. The Injunction was obtained by Radio Features, Inc., a Chicago firm that produces syndicated ra dio programs. The firms claimed the order would cause it "irre parable damage." Dressmaking-Alterations Women and Children Zoe Newman S2S Cobb St Phone 3S7-RX ' - - BOR0ENS tOONOEftFUL COTTAGE CHteSB 1 V FRUIT SALAD ry jyicy B(TSof luscious FRurrs I MIXED WITH BORDEN S VLVT-SMOOTH COTTAGE CHZBSely ( JUST OlP OUT OF THE CARTON J ANOSeRvs! 1 TV J I Mr"-"" r i in j I T.-J". " I VI tMlt kJJ C&L i-'tlV iTTAGE CHEESE V Magnuson Urges Appropriation For Ship Repair WASHINGTON, Sept 14. ( Senator Magnuson (D-Wash) to day urged giving $25,000,000 to the Maritime commission for Im mediate repair of 134 ships In the maritime reserve fleet. This, he said, would be the start of an annual program to get In shape some 439 wartime merchant vessels regarded by the joint chiefs of staff as a mini, mum for defense purposes. An Immediate start on the re conditioning program also is es sential for the nation's shipyards, he told a senate appropriations subcommittee now considering a bill to provide extra money for the commission. "Unless it is done," he declared, "many U. S. shipyards will come to a standstill." Since 1947, Magnuson said, there has been an average em- filoyment decline of 41 percent n private shipyards. For the Pa cific Coast he said the figure was 69 percent, for Gulf yards 62 percent, and north Atlantic yards 33 percent. The vessels he listed as due for immediate overhauls Included: Pacific 34 in Suisan Bay (San Francisco), 10 at Astoria, Ore., 9 at Olympia, Wash. No Pampering Of Our Waves At. . long last we've found it a permanent wave that needs no pampering! It's a flip pant young style that needs only a flick of the brush phone 424 for your appointment now. Ma's Beauty Shop 407 Pacific BIdg. Phone 424 Mother KhouTgesT t