The Central Point American. (Central Point, Or.) 1936-195?, August 23, 1956, Page 5, Image 5

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    THURSDAY. AUGUST 23, 195g
CENTRAL POINT AMERICAN. CENTRAL POINT. OREGON
Sams Valley Couples
Observe Anniversary
Of Double Wedding
Mr. and Mrs. Robert McAllist­
er and Mr. and Mrs. George Beil.
«11 of Sams Valley, celebrated
the 16th anniversary of their
double wedding Iasi Saturday
evening at the McAllister home
in Sams Valley.
The two couples were married
in a double ceremony on August
19, 1940, at Carson City, Nevada
A barbecue picnic supper was
enjoyed and games were played
later in the evening.
In addition to the two honor­
ed couples, guests present were
Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Hammill
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Matteson and family and Paul
Hammill.
daisies or other smaiflowers
P"c>"r Wi,h d'““,e rosebuds'
Sparkling iced tea is simple to prepare these days with the new
improved Instant Tender Leaf T<£ It is 100 per cen^pure tel *
combination of selected orange pekoe and pekoe black tea which
is brewed for you, flash-dried and bottled, ready for making into a
perfect beverage, either by the single glass or in a pitcher. Simply
dissolve a measured amount of tea in a small quantity of boiling
water, according to label directions. Add cold water and ice_ and
a truly refreshing and flavorful drink is ready to serve.
SPRING DAY CAKE
1 10-inch sponge or orange chiffon cake
1 cup milk
1 cup heavy cream
1 package instant banana cream pudding
F pint fresh strawberries
With a sharp knife, split cake into four layers. Pour milk and
cream into a deep, one-quart bowl. Add instant pudding and beat'
until well mixed, about 1 minute. Let pudding thicken to good
spreading consistency, about 5 minutes. Spread between cake layers
and top of cake. Garnish with fresh strawberries, sliced in half.
Noel-Mekvold
To Wed Tuesday
Miss Vicki Jeannine Noel,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Victor
E. Noel of Central Point, and
Gordon Kenneth Mekvold, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Alf B. Mekvold,
Central Point, will exchange
wedding vows Tuesday evening,
August 28.
The ceremony will be held at
the First Presbyterian church in
Medford. The Rev. Norman K.
Tully, pastor of the First Pres­
byterian church of Central Point,
will conduct the ceremony.
Children Honor
Parents at GH
On Golden Wedding
By Mrs. Adah Jones
GOLD HILL—Mr. and Mrs. A.
B. Taylor, who live at w’est end
of First avenue were honored
on their 50th wedding anniver­
sary on August 15 by a surprise
dinner given by their children
and grandchildren at the home
of their daughter, Mrs. H. A.
Densmore.
Present were Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Taylor and children Ron­
nie and Eileen; Mike is a son
of the A. B. Taylors, daughter
living in Louisana was unable
to come. Mr. and Mrs. Pat Whit­
more and children Daniel, David,
Sharon, Steven and Clifford of
Klamath Falls; Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Shoemaker and children Darlene
and Billie. Mrs. Whitmore and
Mrs. Shoemaker are granddaugh­
ters of the Taylors.
Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Densmore
and daughter Sandra recently
moved to Coquille, Oregon. Mrs.
Densmore came over for the oc­
casion of her parents 50th wed­
ding anniversary. Mr. Densmore
was station agent for the S.P.
at Gold Hill and has a similar
position at Coquille. They have
their home here up for sale.
SCHOOLS OPEN ON 4th
Bandon public schools will
open Tuesday, Sept. 4, for the
coming school year, according to
Superintendent Roland L. Parks.
Registration of high school stud­
ents will take place earlier as
given in another story in this
paper. Most of the high school
students are already registered
but they may be new students
in the community and others may
have decided on schedule change.
The principals’ of the school
district will be in their offices
after August 15 and will be pre­
pared to talk to new parents or
discuss any problems of estab­
lished patrons —Bandon Western
World
. For Real Economy Shop The
ECONOMY
market
A
Where Your Dollar Makes More Cents
as the result of the 1956 Sheriff’s
Posset', 4-H and FFA fat stock
auction held Saturday night at
the county fair grounds. , This
amount is more than a quarter
of the total sales at the auction,
in which stock from clubs all
over the county went on the
block.
The total sale included 20,2s5
pounds of beef which brought
$5,967.26 or an average of 30.70
cents per pound, second highest
average beef price in the last
four years; 5,875 pounds of pork,
bringing in $1,561.90, average of
26 37 per pound, lowest in the
four year period; and 2,740
pounds lamb. $837.48, average
30 14, third highest in four .-’ears.
—Illinois Valley News
JUVENILE HOME
HUNTING FOR HOUSES
serving luscious desirt!’ bnngin« u\th « the fun of entertaining,
ing ¿f ill beveraPPs
.a/c°mpanied by that most thirst-quench-
fo? feed tea becfut thA
"ystal .ear pitcher is a nice choice
frostvmakes an £vit ™ S?“rkling amber beverage, well iced and
festiS mueb
Vi guP1CtU7 °J pure refreshment. For an extra-
PAGE FIVE
Edward Griggs and James
Nau, two new members of the
Crater High school faculty, were
in Central Point earlier this
week hunting for houses. Supt.
H. P. Jewett reported that one
more faculty member needs a
house for the school year.
Headline News
from
Jackson county will build a
$90,000 juvenile home and ad­
ministration wing with actual
construction starting next spring.
Actually, the home will cost
about $65,000 and the adminis­
trative wing about $25,000. The
former amount was voted by the
taxpayers and the latter by the
county court approval.
While specifications are now
being drawn by the architect,
preliminary estimates as to cost
have already been made.—Rogue
River Times
TOP FAIR AWARD
Here ’n There
HIGH PRICES
Young ranchers in the Valley
are richer this week by $2,242.18,
The award of a purple grand­
champion's ribbon on Saturday
night to Clarence Brooks, presi­
dent of the fair board, from the
State Fair Board Association for
u M M .4 .4
-T-^r n
■ ! 1
'T—
BACK-TO-SCHOOL
1
•4
SUPPLIES
Eight state policemen raided
the Cliff House here Saturday
night, and stirred up a hornets
nest of local opposition. The raid
was strictly a state police show,
and neither district attorney Ed
Ackley, the Curry County Sher­
iff Glenn Sabin or Brookings
Police Chief Bud Cross were
notified that the raid was taking
place.
Danny Wagner, operator of the
Cliff House was arrested, al­
though not taken into custody
on the charge of operating a
gambling house. Wagoner ap­
peared before Justice of Peace
Roy Brown Monday morning and
was released on his own recog­
nizance. State Police Officer Mc­
Donald said that he would be
arraigned in about two weeks.—
Brookings Harbor Pilot
h
FRANCES FIELDS
Hoist fciaofliit
Oftfit Wheat Lngit
Lewis Building
PirtlMd 4. Qitgti
A very familiar cry in American
families. At picnics, parties.
merUime ... particularly during
the summer months, Handwichee
just fit the bill. There's economy,
ease, versatility and good taste
In sandwiches Especially when
the flour blend includes fine Ore­
gon soft wheat. Sandwiches
made from enriched bread are
high in nutritive value, too, and
are so easy to prepare
BINDERS
New pastel colors.
Popular 3-ring styles.
$1.75 to $6.59
Complete Stock of Supplies
Pens
Ink
Paper
Notebooks
Pencils
Erasers
Central Point Pharmacy
S & H Green Stamps
Phone NO 4 1183
CENTRAL POINT
233 Pine
BACK TO SCHOOL-
A NEW TWIST to your breakfast
plans are these tempting French
¡Trani Sandwiches. Willi fresh
rasplierriaa, bacini, milk or cof­
fre, a real Irral in ihr morning
FRENCH CREAM SANDWICH
8-ounce pint cream cheese
% cup drained, crushed pineapple
(8 ounce can)
« slices enriched bread
1 egg beaten
U cup milk
Dash of salt
cup butter
Make sandwich tilling by combining
cream cheese and pineapple Mix un-
til creamy Killing makes 3 sand
wtches. Cut each sandwich In half
diagonally. Combine egg, milk and
salt In shallow dish Dip each slds
of sandwich Into ckk mixture and
brown quickly on both aides in but­
ter. Makes 3 sandwiches
<t C <t
Here’s a real “whopper” lliai
makes a meal — Iliampion llain
Sandwich Rake.
In a few weeks Roque Valley youngsters will be
starting back to school -and already many of them will
be dreaming of college. Most parents spend a lot of
time dreaming about their children's futures too . . . and
planning ways to give them the best in education.
Parents in the Rogue Valley have found that the
best way to assure a good education for their child: en
Is to start early with a systematic savings plan at their
home-owned, home-opefated Savings and Loan Associa­
tion. At Jackson County Federal Savings and Loan, sav­
ings are insured up to $10,000 on each account—and
the current dividend is 3% per annum.
CHAMPION
HAM SANDWICH RAKE
8 slices enriched bread
Butter
4 slices boiled ham
4 thick slices tomato
4 slices American cheese
1*4 cup condensed cream
of mushroom soup
t4 cup milk
Paprika
Rutter bread On 4 slices of bread
place ham, then tomato and ■ heese
Cover with remaining 4 slices of
bread Cut sandwiches In half and
pla<
in a » Inch baking pan. Com­
bine soup with milk and mix thor­
oughly Pour over sandwiches Sprln-
kla with paprika Rake In moderate
oven <4O0*) 30 minutes 4 servings.
Hot or cold, sandwiches are a
summer menu mainstay. Particu­
larly in August ...Sandwich Time.
SAVINGS b LOAN ASSOCIATION
*
OPEN SUNDAYS - 9 Til 8
OPEN WEEKDAYS - 8 Til 8
GAMBLING RAID
ZIPPER
In Central Point
High Quality Foods With A Money
Back Gurantee on Every Purchase
conducting “the most representa­
tive fair in the state,” was a
surprise feature of the Saturday
night Fair Queen’s banquet,
sponsored annally by the Gold
Beach Rotary Club. '— Curry
County Reporter
ItS K. Main
Madford
*
Sim. 1404
"Where You Are
Paid io Save"
Oregon wheats make breads and
crackers that are far superior in
taste and nutritional benefits...
just right in every wnv.
OSfGON WHFAt COMMISSION
SOS 8. W. 10th. rtNOLETON, OltffiON
O regon W heat