Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, March 22, 1927, Page 3, Image 3

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    .queued to attend and aa many as
'can'brine a friend. Tian« are to
be ragde f o r / t h e comine enter-
tn ta n e rt. which « ill be h e i d
eottetime la the near future.
BafrMhmsnts will be served by
tha-following coamlUee with Mrs.
M|hnie Gearhart as chairman:
Me^damee
Gentry.
Galbraith,
Crowson, Hager* and Hedrick. *
'- .M M M ,
Southern Oregon Normal School
MISS DOROTHY REID, Editor
CA LEN DA R OF EVENTS
io ahtae upon her, and she melts
Wednesday, Mar. 2».— Auxil­
iary to T rin ity Guild soeial
night. Pariah house. Hostesses,
Mrs. M. P. Dunn, M rt. Lynn
Slaok.
t
Wednesday, M ar. 22
Social Cir­
cle of the Chrtstlan-church will
meet in the church parlors.
WetlnpMlay, Mar. 22.— Founder's
Day at 2:30 p. m. at the C. B.
P ratt home at 438 North M ain
Street.
, ’
'
Thursday, Mar. ^4.— Ladles Aid
of the M. E. church w ill hold a
'• meeting in the church parlors
at 1:30 p. m.
Thursday. Mar. 24.— E lk ’s Ladles
card club will meet In the E lk ’s
club rooms for their usual
meeting. Mrs. D.’ Perossi and
Mrs. George Gillette, hostesses.
Sunday, Mar. 27. —
Methodist,
Episcopal church begin a re­
vival which will last until the
17th of April.
Wednesday, M ar. SO.— The Pres­
byterian church will hold their
annual all-day meeting and din­
ner In the church. Election of
officers.
away into the rising spring
water«. <•
. ' '
•• '/ X • y
Frpm “Modern Music and Musi-
c'.aqs.”
■ '■
33 33 33
Women’s Foreign Missionary
Society Meets ■ ,
The Women’s Foreign Mis­
sionary society of the Methodist
Episcopal church «-ill meet tomor­
row, Wednesday, March'23, at the
home, of Mr«. C. B. P ratt at 438
North M ain «treat at 2:30. The
offering fro m thia meeting w ill go
toward Miss Mary Young’s salary.
Miss Young was formerly an
Ashland g irl, who is now on the
Mission field, and she has many
friends here who are Interested In
her work.*
33 33 tt
Farewell Surprise Party In Honor
Let Us Launder
Your Lace
Curtains
With spring at hand, we
are now ready to launder
your, curtains and can
guarantee perfect service.
We h a v e a m o d e r n
stretching device that will
send your curtains back
to you in perfect'copdi<
tion.
Ashland
Laundry
Better
Mornings
via
Breakfasts
That
"Stand B y ”
Quaker Oat» Urged W ide­
ly by Authorities
O R E M O S T educators, editors
as well as leading business insti­
tutions like General Electric Com­
pany, now are widely urging break­
fasts that “stand by” aa ad important
aid to success.
T h at’s because if is now known
that over 70% of the day’« impor­
tant work, in offices, stores, etc., falls
into the four morning hours—the
hours from 8:30 to 12:30.
. •
In most American schools, includ­
ing Princeton, Yale, most State Uni­
versities and some 2,000 grade
schools throughout the country 80%
of the important classes are held
before luncheon.
Thus, largely on expert advice,
millions now start days with Quakei
Oats — food that “stands b y ’ ont
through the morning.
Excellently balanced ,in protei»,
carbohydrates, minerals and the im­
portant Vium ine B, this delicious
food is idfeal for Vanishing listless
mornings.
Today ' get Quick Quaker that
cooks in 2J4 to 5 minutes or regular
Quaker 'Oats at grocer’s
F
SPECIAL
Johnson Electric
Washing Machine
Guaranteed A -l
Shape
XL ELECTRIC
Station
GUX GOOD
Phone 82
Official R. O. JL Station
Quick Quaker
A Rave Dish 1
Baked Omelet
A /T O S T wom en th in k An O m elet
Souffle is difficult to prepare.
This recipe proves it is not« And it also
proves how generally useful Mazola is
for all cooking—three uses from a single
can—a perfect fat for frying-—a shorten­
ing equal to butter in richness—a Salad
oil o f the highest quality. P ,
. >
Once you try Mazola you will never
go back to the old-fashioned methods o f
cooking.
This recipe is from Ida Bailey Allen’s
New Book “ The Modern Method o f
Preparing Delightful Foods’’— see cou­
pon below.
rpoons
Aof
ask your grocer for
Ashland Creamery
BUTTER ; '
Envelopes - $
1
(The Regular Price on the above Is $9.00)
For the next nine days only, the
Commercial Printing department of
The Tidings will print, on a high
grade stock, five hundred letter
heads and envelopes at the above
SPECIAL PRICE
NOW IS THE OPPORTUNITY TO LAY IN A
SUPPLY OF STATIONERY WITH THE SPRING
BUSINESS COMING ON, THERE WILL BE A
GREATER DEMAND FOR LETTER HEADS
AND
ENVELOPES.
CHECK
OVER
YOUR
SUPPLY NOW, AND THOUGH YOU MAY
HAVE A SUPPLY ON HAND, IT WILL MEAN
MONEY IN YOUR POCKET TO ORDER AT
THIS TIME.
or Kingsford's
Cornstarch'
y i teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon Jta-
yiteaspoonpepper
zola
T T E A T the Mazola in a quart-sized
± 1 baking dish, rubbing the sides
with the hot oil. Separate the eggs,
beat the whites stiff and the yolks till
creamy. Add the cornstarch, water
and seasonings, fold b the whites,
transfer to the heated baking dish
and bake twelve to fifteen minutes in
a hot oven, 376 degrees F .
• '
ecut»**"-
For quality; purity and flavor, always
500 Letter Heads
BAKED O M E L E T SO UFFLE
JUST PIÏONE
1 65
W H IT E PLA IN S. N. Y„ Mar.
21.— <U P ) _ Edward W e - I 4
Browning, 12-yoaroty m illionaire,
today won separation I r o n
Frances Peaches Browning, a girl
I t years his Junior, whom he
married less than a year ago. The
decision o f. Justice Seager was
filed today. The court dismissed
Mrs. Brownings claim and award­
ed Browning absolute separation;
RIP
Of heater Beck—
Lester Beck was completely and
happily surprised Saturday eve­
ning, March 12, when he was in­
vited to* a farewell party at ‘the
Llthla Springs hotel, which had
been secretaly arranged ' by a
a tt tt
large group of Southern Oregon
S N O W -W H ITE
Normal school students, In hi«,
SnowWhlte sat alone and plied
honor. Lester Is leaving tomor­
H er deft needle to and fro.
row for Klamath Falls where he,
T ill the loom’s pale web outvied .«rill make his future home.
Rime-thick panes, where frost-
The time w a r spout playing
flowers grow.
cards and dancing, the music be­
ing furnished by several of the
Snow-White, wielded deftly, too,
students.
Punch wsbs
served
Fancy’e fairy,bobkin bright.
throughout the evening.
Pricking stuff o’dreame to new
Special Invitations were ex­
Patterne lined in ellver light.
tended to M r. and Mrs. A rthur S.
Taylor and Miss Beatrice H all of
Snow-White, with shy,- nun-like the Normal fhculty.
,
glances,
33 33 tt
. Dainty, mystic, cloistered maid, Will Entertain Young Men of
Marked earth’s delicate nuances. Church—
.
Subtleties of sound and shade.
Mrs. Fred Hitchcock and the
ladles of the Presbyterian church
Not for Snow-White, lusty life,
will entertain the high school and
Sordid, strident, stained with young men’s class, of which W . P.
Walters Is the leader, with a din-,
sin:
Not the throb of drum and fife.
ner in the church parlors, Friday
H er still. Ivory tower wlthlh.
evening, March 25.
tt 33 tt
;
Snow-White, from her tower’s
Social Clrrlc Meets Tomorrow—
• > ,bright,
The Sodlal 0lr6ie of ’the Chris­
Leaned above the gulf o f Time,
tian church will hold a^vqjx In-
Like a moon-beam,» poised for
fllfcb't,
\
, ; , /
" tsreqttng ’meeting { n th e church
parlors \ tomorrow, Wednesday,
Back to its pure natal clime.
March 23 at 2:30.
Every meniber Iq urgent}?; re-
Snow-White’s( soul, immaculate,
Was not meant for this dim
staf;
Lovely fugitive of Fate,.
•
Lured by voices from afar,
W inifred Watson, Ashland, Ore.
tt 33 33
*
• %
* -
SNEOOVROTCHKA
(The Snow Malden)
Opera in three acts by
Rimsky-Korea kav
Founded Upon Ostrovsky
t A o Snow Maiden, daughter of
"King Frost and the Fairy Spring,
who. hearing the songs of the
chcpherd Lei, begs her parents to
allow her to becotne a mortal, is
the theme of this opera.
The parents consenting, entrust
her to the care of two peasants.
Fairy Spring tells the daughter
to call on her if she ever noeds
help. The Snow Malden becomes'
a mortal but Lei w ill have, none of
her. She Is. however, beloved by
the merchant Mlsgyr, who on her
account deserts his
affianced
bride, Kupava.
A t the magnlfieent * court of
Berendei, Kupava demknds Jus­
tice, but the king, seeing the
Snow Maiden, decrees that she
ehail belong to anyone of his
courtiers who can woo her and
wlq her within twent-four hours.
In the Subsequent forest sesne
we see the revels of the peoplo of
Berendei.
.. /
The Snow Malden, seeing the
lovers Lei and Kupava, In desper­
ation calls upon h e / mother to
give her human love.
Granted
this request she at last responds
to the\advances of Mlsgyr, bnt
lust thenTHe summer sub begins
The faculty of the Southern
Oregon Normal school was charm­
ingly entertained with a Bridge
party* in the Civic club house oq
WJsburn W ay Friday evening,.
Match l i . 'b y the foyowjng ladies:
Mesdamee A rthu r 8. Taylor. W a l­
ter Redford and V. V .& a ld w e ll.
Five tables were In play; Mrs.
J. A, Churchill, won the first
prise g^d Miss Geòrgie Mooney
was awarded the consolation.
A t a late hour the hostesses
served refreshments, which were
daintily arranged.
Edward Browning -,
,Wins Separation
S Send
O n |y 10c
Commercial Printing Department