Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (July 26, 1945)
LK GRANDE EVENING OBSERVEK Phone 600 News and Activities Engagements - . . Weddings Social Events Thursday, July 26, 1945 Page 8 Society Briefs Miss Pauline Dane of Eastend, Sask., is a visitor at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Dixon. Miss Dane, who recently graduated from' University of Sasketoon, is b niece of Mrs. Dixon, with whom she will visit for a month. Previous to her arrival here, .she spent a month in Portland with a sister of Mrs. Dixon, Mrs. Enid Rhea. Miss Eva Wear and her neph ew, Dan Moore of Spokane, re turned to her home in La Grande yesterday, after a week's vaca tion at Wallowa lake. . Rev. and Mrs. C. G. Hannan and their daughters, Mrs. Frank Tyler, Patsy and Nora, of Payette, Idaho, were guests Sunday night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. F. ,Tyler. On Monday the group left for Tacoma where Rev. Hannan, former minister of the First Meth odist church in La Grande, plan ned to attepd a ministerial con ference.. I They will stop in La Grande on their return trip to their home. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin R. Kaiser it and -their sons, Dickie and Gary, plan to return to La Grande about f Aug. 20, after having spent the 4 past year in the east. Kaiser, in ; structor of drama and speech in ! the English department of East- ern Oregon college, has spent the past year at the University ol Iowa studying toward his doc torate, and will resume his po sition at the local college. Mrs. Kaiser and their sons, are at the home of her father in Kewanee, 111., and will be met there by Mr. Kaiser for the return trip. Mrs. Ed Mobley and children of Eugene, are in La Grande for a few weeks to visit her parents, Mr.- andn Mrs. E. O. Morris and with her husband's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Mobley and other relatives. Lee Reynolds left yesterday for Wallowa lake on business. -, t, ... ,' E. H. McDonald has-.returned to Salem after a three-month vis-" it at the home of his daughter, Mrs. E. D. Jasper, 1304 M avenue. Mrs Elmer Kooch, North Pow der, and her sister-in-law, Mil dred, Portland, were here yester ay visiting. : w Mrs. Frank , Gribben, Weiser, Ida,, spent the weekend at the home of her sister, Mrs. E. D. Jasper, 1304 M avenue '' Mr. .and Mrs. Hill Tcmplelon of Portland, f o r m e r 1 y of La Grande, are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Welby Vaughn, in the Iowa district. Mrs. Howard Lyman and son, Roger, Portland, will arrive to night for a visit at the home of her .parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Binger, 1812 Cedar street. She is the. .former Janet Bingner. Annual Joint Picnic ' Of VFW, Auxiliary To Be Sunday The annual joint picnic ,of the Veterans of Foreign Wars and the United Spanish War Veterans and their auxiliaries, will be an event of Sunday afternoon at Riverside park. The organizations have n y.ited as their guests the new VFW Craig post .of .Union and their families. - The days activities will com mence at 3:30 o'clock :and each family is to bring .its dinner and table service. Ice cream and cof fee .will be furnished by the lodges. Chairmen in charge of arrange ments for the occasion are Glen John of the VFW, Mrs. Dick Bur nett for the VFW auxiliary, and Mrs. August Nelson for the Span ish War Veterans. , Esther Matheson ; Weds Sidney Sanf ord Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Morris have announced the marriage of their daughter, Mrs. Esther Matheson, to Sidney S. Sanford of- Vancou ver, Wash. The wedding was an event of July 20 in Vancouver, with the ceremony performed by the brother of the groom! Rev. Wil liam Sanford. Immediately following the serv ice a wedding supper was served at the couple's home on route 1, for 19 guests. ' Morrises Wed 44 Years, Anniversary : Observed at Party Mr. and Mrs. Ennis O. Morris of 2703 N. Fir street, obsefved their 44th wedding anniversary at their home last evening with a family dinner .for 23. Mr. and Mrs. Morris were mar ried at Redlodge, Mont., July 25, 1901, and have resided in. La Grande 33 years. They have six children, four of whom were pres ent for the celebration, 18 grand children and four great .grand children. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Adren See and children, Gloria, Norma, Margareti Wendell and Nancy, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Elax. ander and daughter, Joanne, Mrs. Louisa Halsey and children, Ro land, Archalene and Mary Lou, Mr. andn Mrs. J. Gordon Morris and son, Bruce and Earl Mathe son, all of La Grande, and Mrs. Donna Mae Mobley and children, J,erald and Jewell of .Eugene. Opium Captured After Accident OCEANSIDE, Calif., July 26 (UP) Opium valued at $18,000 was confiscated today by police as they investigated a traffic ac cident involving three American sailors and two Chinese civilians. Fung Wing Snuck, 23, San Di ego, and Gee Jing Wind, 23, San Francisco, were injured when their opium laden .car collided with a vehicle containing the sail ors. They are under guard at Occanside hospital. 'Washington, ' D. C, is' located southwest of Ottawa, Canada. New Books Added To Public Library New books recently added .to the public library are: The Bible Speaks to Our Day by George Barclay; Hymns in the Lives of Men, Ty : WcCi)lclnjn; The New Education and'Religiqh, by John Williams; Can Drn'ocra cy Recover, by Louis ( Marlio; Freedom Is More Than- -ii Word, by Marshall Field; Russia '.,and Postwar Europe, by DaVldDallin; Tin Horns and Calico, by :Henry Christman; The Road to Serfdom, by Fnednch Hayek. ' . Thev Hop and Crawl, by Percy Morris; The Doctor's Job, by Carl Binger; Forget Your Age, by Pe ter Steincrohn; Woman's Medical Problems, by. Maxine Davis; The Wild Horse of the West, by Walker D. Wyman; T9II ;House Tried and True Recipes, by Ruth Wakefield; The Standard Cock tail Guide; by Crosby' Gaige; Esquire's First Sport Reader, by Herbert Graffis; Country Chron icle, by Heman Petersen. Alaska and the Canadian Northwest, -by Harold 'Griffin; The Pacific Islands Handbook 1944, by Robert Robson; The Moral Conquest of Germany, by Emil Ludwig; The Future of Eu rope, by ohannes Steele; Movie Lot to Beachhead, by Editors of Look; It's Good To Be Alive, by Henrietta Sharon; Ancestors' Bro cades; the literary debut of Em ily Dickinson, by Millicent Bing ham; Footloose Fiddler, by Harry Miller. ' Schilling Chili Powder just right for all chili dishes POTATO CHIP CO. PORTLAND, OREGON Dear Customer: It is necessary for us to ration potato chips due to our inability to secure sufficient fats and oils with which to cooX. We feel that our output should be divided fairly among our customers. We wish to thank you for business you have given us. We appreciate your co- ' operation and your kindness to our .dealers. It ia our desire to contiaue serving you, not only now, but also when conditions are back to normal again. We trust you will be kind enough to bear wit us until such time es we can deliver all the potato chips you wish. Respectfully yours, BELL P0IAI0 CHIP CO. Social Calendar THURSDAY 6:30 b. m. Mavericks hambur ger fry in the yard of McCoy's home, on G avenue. Membeis bring hamburger and buns. V V V FRIDAY .. 2 n. .m. Pollyanna club, River side park. 6:30 p. m. Westway club pot luck picnic. Riverside park. SUNDAY . . 1 Annual picnic cf ,the combined Veterans of Foreign Wars and United 'Spanish War veterans, Riverside park, 3:30 p. m. Older Members Of Rebekahs Honored By Program Here , Members of the Rebekah lodge here, who joined .the order be tween 1892 and 1914, were guests of honor last night .after the rcg .ular .meeting of the lodge. .With Mrs. Lou Robertson, no ble grand, presiding, the follow ing ..program was presented: Song bv a auartet, Mrs. Robertson, Mrs. Eva Shafer, Mrs. Lydia Hug and Mrs. Emma Cameron; violin solo by Ruth Gragg; piano solo by Patricia Mashell; reading by Mrs. Carroll. Refreshments were serv ed later by the new officers, lead by Mrs,- Shafer. Club Women Here Defeat Baker Club f . - . -..-" In Golf; Miss Spaeth has Low Sctore The La Grande Country club women defeated, the women of the Baker Country club by. a score of 25 to 10 in an inter-city tournament here Wednesday. Miss Madeline Spaeth had the low medal score of 80 for the lo cal players. Her opponent, Mrs. C. Rudolph, was low medalist for Baker with 90. Prizes were awarded as fol lows: La Grande, Miss Madeline Spaeth, class A, 80-3 net 77: Mrs. W. C. Perkins, class B, 104-23 net 81. Awards to the Baker players went to Mrs. C. Rudolph, low gross 90: 106-22 net 84. Eleven eighteen-hole and two nine-hole matches were played with the following results: Mrs. C. Rudolph 0, Miss M. Spaelh 3; Mrs. E. Miles 0, Mrs. Anne Deck er 3; Mrs. L. Stoddard 0, Mrs. H. Siegrist 3; Mrs. E. Baer Mi, Mrs. C. Bohnenkamp -2Vi; Mrs. M. Rogers i, Mrs. C. Reynolds 2V4; Mrs. I. Bartlett 1, Mrs. W. C. Per kins 2; Mrs. .G. Miller US; Mrs. F. Lanzcr H4; Mrs. C. Thomas 3, Mrs. E. Donnelly 0; Mrs. A. Wor- ley 2V4, Mrs. M. Graham li; Mrs M. McKim 0, Mrs. F. Spaeth 3; Mrs. E. Schmidt 0, Mrs. M. Blake 3; Mrs. M. Vaughn 1, Mrs. M. Price 0; Mrs. E. Steward 0 Mrs. J. Larison 1. After the golf match luncheon was served to the players and local members by the following committee: Mrs. Trcve Lumsden and Mrs. Paul Van Scoy, co-chairmen, Mrs. D. Meyers, Mis. Hat tie Kinzel, Mrs. E. Olsen, Mrs. G. Wilson, Mrs. K. Schilling and Miss M. Christensen. Guests were Mrs. Pauline Dane of Suskatche wan, and Mis. Russell Jones of Salem. At the regular Wednesday tour nament and luncheon of July 18, a flag tournament was held which was won by Mrs. Fred Lanzer. . Scheduled for Sunday, July 29, a tournament for men and wom en will be played during the af ternoon, followed by a 7 o'clock supper. The committee in charge will be Mr. and Mrs. A. K. Par ker, chairman, Mr. and Mra. C. A. Walker, Mr. and Mrs. -J,--Fitzgerald. Reservations may be made by calling Mrs. J. t-arison not later than Saturday .noon. MAHOGANY SOURCES Costa Rica Cuba, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Mexico, Nica ragua and Panama are among th principal sources of .the world' JJ rrujnugany. . iMAKE ICECREAM A home Any flavor Dallcloui Smooth No ice crytlaU No cooking No r whipping No tcorched flavor Eaiy Inexpensive 20 red pet In each 15 pkg. Pleat e tend thii ad for free full-ilie sam ple ofier, or buy from yowr grocer. LonDonoeiWJ Brand Homemade fee Cream STABIUZR ItNOONDIHRT 93SH0WMD. SIN HUNCH CO I, Cliff. ,' eve r 'Fopular because fa FRESH p mljjL mSH because H's Popular! vlpF ft, H (III! '" 1: I '.im. m . ' m m mm m. i n i oa ! "THE GRAINS ARE GREAT FOODS" mm Kellogg's Corn Flakes bring you' nearly all the protective food ele-:s merits of the whole grain declared' essential to human nutrition,. m m w v 9 mam Sttfatt Bay PLEDGED TO KEEP PRICES SiLqWt low? you can can without Autyvi! All you do is substitute fruit juice oi water for the syrup in the recipe. Fill to V: inch of top, and process in your usual way. There is no other change. . Or, you can stretch your sugar with honey or corn syrup Honey may replaca up to 'j the sugar in jams or preserves. White corn syrup may replace up to ' the sugar in jams, and 'j trie sugar in pre serves. Honey or corn syrup may replace up to V) the sugar in canning syrups. Sugar alone- 5 pounds will . . . sweeten 20 qls. of fruit ...or make 20-40 glasses of jelly Ci-pt. size) ... or make 1-5 pints of fruit butter Now is the time to serve more salads . . . while fresh fruita -and .Vegetables are in plentiful supply nd at their peak of good ness. At Snfeway fruits- and vegetables are priced by the pound to assure you:full value v .. every timfc you buy. -' 83' 93' Mason Jam Kerr Reg. 2dz. pis. 1.J3 ldoz. qts. I Lconomy Jars Kerr brand 2 dz. pts. 1.99 1 doz. qts. ' Ball Jars 0-e Re?. Mason 2 dz. pts. l.J3 ldz.qts. OJ Kerr Wa Regular, pkg. containing 1 doz.O for CO Kerr Caps Regular pkg. coniaining 1 doz. zA Ball Caps c Regular pkg. containing 1 doz. &l Pen Jel Powdered Pectin pkg. lb Parowax - Reliable Jolly or Jam Sealer it pkg3. 3 How to make Salads : that make meals . A savory snlad enn mnko the day i and tha menl in this July weather. You might use a mouthW(Uer.ing tender cfucken hnte; or perhaps a I bowl of rich fruit drenched with n piquant dressing is (lie pa late-teaser j you're looking for. Add hot rolls or I sandwiches to any of these, may bo fruit cobbler or gingerbread for des- sort, a beverage und presto: you have a meal. SAIAD fLATI I Attractively arrange mound or mold of chicken, meat or fish so kid on lettuce or spinnch leaves in center of plate. Surround with lettuce cups in wnicn are piacca naii-peeied toma toes lopped with cucumber dressing ( I cup mayonnaise and C tablespoons shredded cucumber) stuffed eggs and ripe olives. LUNCHEON SUMMIR FRUIT SAIAD Toss together in salad bowl, 3 cups shredded lettuce or greens, l cups sliced fresh peaches, 1 cup seedless grapes, ! cup sliced celery and 1H cups shredded cheese with cup mayonnniHc or salad dressing and French dressing to taste. Garnish with lettuce, fresh berries and pea nuts. Serves 6. PICNIC ClUt SALAD Toss together 3 cups cooked maca roni, 1 Vi cmps sliced frankfurters or diced luncheon meat, cup sliced radishes, 3 tablespoons sliced green onion, cup sliced olives, A table spoons French dressing and H to cup mayonnaise. Season with salt and pepper. Garnish with tomato wedges and parley. Serves G, fft- Safeway SuSsf Homemakers' Bureau JUUA LIX HKKiltT. Iirlor Clip tops Solid heads lb, lb. lb. Carrots Cabbage Beefs ' Vgry healthful Ripe. wunruiuupc swt. ib. Oranges S 5ibs Lemons Grapefruit . Field Grown TOMATOES firm pnd ripe lb.SSc 8 e 54 For refreshing Lemonade i i i i lb Thin skinned Ib. Full of Juice Squash . Crookneck, Scollop and 'Tbiec Crispy Radishes J3; 20C Green Onions ib. 30c Local Crop Celery Utah Type lb' 18c S3. WHEATIES Giant Size 12oz. Pkg. 15 Spiced Ham Sliced fresh (IT55C Luncheon Meat Splcod (8Lpb"' 53e I'ORK CHOPS Center Cuts, 12 pts., BKEFMVKK 4 Points 2 Points I'ORK SIIOIU.DKK STEAKS 8 Points VEAL LOIN CHOPS A (Jiudc, 10 points .... VEAL ROAST A (iiiide, ! nts. ...j Slhci Halibut, lb 40c Salt Mackeral, 33c Mallo Meal Delicious Coreal 26-oz. pkg. 22G Nabisco 100 Bran l ib.pkg. 17c Raisin Bran Flakes Kellogg 10-oz. pkg. ic Kitchen Crafi Flour Enrich;1 10-ib.wck.49c Cherub Milk 2 H'T 17 4 DfT 17 Duffs Mixes Muflin $ Walile M-oz. pkg. 22 Cane Sugar 5-ib.ck33c lo ib. sack 64c Peanut Buffer Overly l ib jar 25c Armour's Treet Sandwich Meat (6pls.) 12 oz. can 33c Davis BrOS. CoddieS CodlishCakos lO-oz glassigc CRfljfcc urn ii). .; .11). ;! ,.S4C - ! IS?. 35c ! 1 Round Steak (ii'itde A U Points lb. ISc Ground Beef fi Points lb. 28c Sasssage Hulk Poi k Type 2 (fi pts.) lM9c SNO-WHITE SALT Plain or Iodized Pkg. Crackers Snownakc 2.1b. Pkg.33c Tomaio Juice Sunnir Dawn rcy.-tiopta.) 46-oz.can 21 Grapefruif Juice Town Hou!e dOpn-) Ho 2 can 13c Heinz Vinegar, cider quart bxiie 19c Cider Vinegar, Old Mill quart botiie 15c Chopped Olives lirtyhwnd 4y,-oz.giaM 14c Diced Beefs, White Tag 2 7 Asparagus Green Bow brand (26jt Ho. 2 can 33c Diced Carrots White Tag Standard, Choice Ho. 2 can 70 Select Brooms SluIiir $1 .00 Phila. Cream Cheese Kraft C2 pt. each) 3-oz. pkg. 1Z Grated Cheese, Kraft (1 pt. ea.) I AHJllllil:i.l.O Ae AHRmi'AB- fte 1 Vt-oz. pkq. Au 2-oz. pkg. 9 American Cheese nrt c Tillamook brand (.(i pin.) 1 Ib. Macaroni -jjc Porter's Hlbow pkg. ui 54' Edwards Coffee noqular and drip grind, 2-lb. jar Airway Coffee MINI anil Mellow flfljc PQc Canterbury Tea Orange Pekoe 'i-lb. pkg. Walnut Meals rc aoari, no shelb Vj-lb. pkg. J3 Woodbury Ccqjiay Soap IJaby foods . , Clapp's Inntrmt Beauty Soap Toilet Soap Oatmoul and Cereal 3 23c 3 be 20c oj lb ?kg- 15c ' O ........ .v .