The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current, January 13, 1955, Page 8, Image 8

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    IWM
Thurv., Jan. 13, 1*55
The
brave, who sink to
mourn?
He ne\er smiled
Arne
is one son only.
Zipper Note B ook -
nge
The Sentinel
Pi
ha rpcneis- The Sentinel
FARM - GARDEN
London Grange
Building Plans
Advanced Jan. 7
D°rena
DI -* M
I M A « »
M
Plans
Initiation
Mrs. Walter N. Bowens
DORENA GRANGE
At the
regular meeting of the Dorena
Grange held on January 7. Ver-
; non and Deany Raasch were elect-
By Mr,, fiale Roby
1 ed to membership.
LONDON GRANGE A build­
Applications for membership
ing committee was appointed at I were read from Ora Sherwood. ।
the January 7 meeting of London Brayton W. Carlisle and Walter
Grange by master Wayne Berg- , . N. Dowens.
gren and includes: P. M. Camp­
The first and second degrees
bell. chairman. Don Martin. O will be given at the next tegular
The
E. Craig and Archie Powell,
meeting on January 21. Those not
committee will meet to plan the having the degrees are urged to
foundation of the new grange hall attend, and members of other
and work to start as soon as pos-
the granges are invited to get their
sible Present plans it dicate
new hall will be located on what degrees also.
...
À voie
vote oi
of thanks
extended
. .
• u
A
inariKS was
wu> i-iiriiu-u
*
Mr. and Mr«. Hamid Tryk and
property which has been secured Eddie Tryk. for the large painting
by the London grange, and in­ to be used as a back drop on the .
cludes material that is usable stage. The painting is on canvas.
from the old 4-H clubhouse that
Mike Sweeney, insurance sales­
is to be torn down. Grange meet­ man. presented the Grange with
ings are now being held in the a large electric clock on behalf '
former Riggs house, which has of the Grange Mutual Insurance
been temporarily remodeled, pend­ Co. Mr. and Mrs. Sweeney were
ing the building of the new hall.
visitors at the meeting.
An interesting talk was given
Ellen Sherrill was reported ill 1
at the lecturer’s hour by Mrs. in the Cottage Grove hospital with
Berggren on "Children Growing
poison oak
Up.” Members responded with ,
Master. Alpha Pitcher urged of-
New Year's resolutions. Lecturer. I
lio K to b< regular in attending
,Mjs. Archie Powell, announced meetings, to enable us to get a
the program outline for the year. plaque and in fairness to the stew­
Men of the grange served pie. do­ ard and his assistants on the drills.
nuts and coffee. Next meeting is Talent Show Jan. 28
' January 21.
It was voted to rent the hall
London II EC
to Louis Caldwell, for the use of
Chairman Mrs. Itean Martin, an. the Cottage Grove Riding club,
Winced the Ixmdon Grange Homi1 for a basket social and talent pro­
Economics will meet this Thurs- 1 gram, on Friday, January 28, at
day at 7:30 p.m., January 13, at
8 p.m.
the grange hall. Mrs. Martin will
Harold Tryk was given the oath
be hostess. Mr Martin received of office II.', Master Alpha Pitcher.
word this week of her appoint-
On visitations this year. Dorena
• ment as one of four member» on will visit at Four Oaks Grange
Lane County Pomona HEC com­ and the Mohawk . McKenzie
mittee.
Grange will visit Dorena.
London Grunge Food < Onecssion
Dorena Grange voted to give
London Grange the food conces­
sion at the South Lane County
fair in 1955, and Dorena will have
it in 1956.
Barbara Downs, lecturer, pre­
sented the following program:
,
A movie by “Larro” ieeds on
their research farms, songs "Old
Dropping leaves on a Christmas McDonald Had a Far m” and
poinsettia plant do not mean it is । “Auld Lange Syne" by the audi-
dying, according to R Ralph ' ence; a stunt, "I Resolve," by
Clark, Oregon State college ex­ members of the grange.
Refreshment committee for Jan­
tension horticulture specialist.
The right care can keep it in uary 21 includes the families of
condition for blooming again next Virgil Bassett, Arthur Bales,
year, he said But Clark cautioned Emery Barker and Ardella Black.
Clean up committee tor January
that proper care and conditions
121 will be the Way, Thorn and
are needed.
Leaf dropping means the plant .Rowlette families.
Georgia McMillan, youth chair-
is going into its normal test per­
iod. which lasts until about May I man. announced the next youth
I meeting on January 12 at the
1. the horticulturist explained
After the leaves fall, put the Snauer home.
plant in a cool place 40 to 501 First and second degree tenm
degrees and water sparingly, he will practice Friday January 14.
recommends. About May 1. cut at 8 p.m. at the hall.
the plant hack quite heavily, to |
remove excess wood and make it ।
more shapely.
Shake off the old soil and re-
pot in a mixture of three parts
garden loam, one part well-rotted
manure and one part leafmold.
By Mr*. Gale Roby
Clark continued Use a pot just
HEBRON GRANGE
Serving
large enough to hold the mass of committee for refreshments at the
nxrts without crowding and still January 5 grange meeting, has
provide good drainage
Water requested each family to bring own
enough to keep the soil from dry­ hamburger and buns for a ham­
burger fry. Potato chips and po­
ing out.
In about another month, when tato salad will also be served Lee-
weather is warm, set the potted turer's hour program is in charge
plant outdoois, submerging the of the executive committee
Hebron Youth met at the grange
jot in the soil at ground level or
a little below Put it in full sun­ hall January 8, with president
shine unless the weather is very Dennis Chapman, in charge of
hot In that case, give it light the meeting Announcements were
shade. Clark says When nights recommended for acceptance by
become cool in the fall, put it in the grange Table tennis and mon-
a window where there is good ■ opoly filled the evening.
Attending the Dorena Grange
light and air and where the tem-
jierature is about 60 to 65 de- play Saturday night from Hebron
greM, but with no draft Wate: were Messrs and Mmes, (’fare
regularly so the soil never dries Chapman. O. M. Patten and For­
out and use a little liquid fer­ rest Woods.
tilizer every week
(lark emjdiasized that protect­
ion from ixith drafts and ex­
tremes of temperature is impor-
to
tant. Another vital thin;
keep the plant dark at nignt
OREGON STATE COLLEGE
Long nights, uninterrupted by
exen a shaft of artificial light, A cake that can be mixed in a
aie needed to bring the poinsettia minute has been developed by Ore- .
into flower, he said. Florists have gon State college home econo- i
found that street lights as much mists
Andrea Mackey, home econo­
from greenhouses can
as 50 y
prevent pomxettKs from blooming mies researcher, is working out I
may not get directions and a recipe the home- ;
In hame*.
enough darkness even in a dimly maker can use for this "quick-
mix" caki Fk l l»e of the ingre­
lighted hall.
'Flic poinreitla needs as much dients use«! <nd the proportions.
light as potsibli during the day. the whole cake can tie mixed at
but an early t« dt me. which may once, she said. Eggs arc not sep-
be arranged by rove ring it with a rated and sugar is not crcamed
a black ekith or by keeping it on with shortening
■ ke has been
glassel-in jxircn or a room that
This minute-aux
not
iteii after nightfall.
developed in laboratory terms but
l»r Mackey suit research results
are expected to I e published this
spring fot use of 'he homemaker.
Mrs Kyriake V lassi, graduate
i momies from
student in hoi
. Greece, is working < on the project
. under Dr Mackey 's direction.
Year Round Care
Of Poinsettia
Plants Outlined
Hebron Grange
To Meet Jan. 15th
'Minute Mix' Cake
Developed at OSC
•‘When all is said and done,
too many people keep on saying
and not doing!**
So Mrs HouieA/*? can read the
tempi nature insid" of her food
freezer without oj» ning the door,
there s a therrronw ler on the mar.
ket which is >
iccted to the
free er by a flex hie tilt»» and
me mted on the niarby w all.
/«*•*!
Wanted for years an easy, "no-forgetting” way to obtain the needed 9 essentia! vitamins and
minerals ... and now Medo-Land makes it possible with their wonderful new "Farm-Fresh”
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♦U.S. Adult Minimum Daily Requirements of 9 Essentia! Vitamin? and Minerals
(AS ESTABLISHED BY U.S. FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION)
1 QUART
REGULAR MILK
CONTAINS
Vitamin A
.....................
Vitamin B> (thiamine)........
Vitamin Bi (riboflavin)
Niacin (another B-Vitamin)
Vitamin D ..........................
Calcium...............................
Phosphorus .......................
Iron.....................................
Iodine .................................
... 41%
... 20%
... 85%
... 20%
...
3%
... 100%
.. . 100%
...
6%
... 20%
1 QUART
MULTI-VITAMiN-MiNlRAL
MUX CONTAINS
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
HERE 5 WHY THESE VITAMINS AND MINERALS ARE SO IMPORTANT TO YOU!
VITAMIN A — for anti-infection, better
vision, clear skin, and healthy hair.
VITAMIN Di (thiamine) — for appetite,
good digestion, healthy nerve functions.
VITAMIN B. (riboflavin) — for vigor
and health at all ages, promotes normal
growth.
NIACIN (another B-vitamin) — for
action, anu
growth, normal digestive action.
healthy nerves.
VI I AMIN D — for sound bones — also
helps prevent tooth decay, rickets.
CALCIUM — for sound bones and reeth.
for normal functioning of heart and
nerves.
%
PHOSPHORUS — for sound bones and
teeth.
IRON — vital part of red blood corpuscle
formation.
IODINE — for proper functioning o'
thyroid gland, helps prevent goiter.
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or 4MXJ
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