Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, August 12, 1943, Image 3

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    SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
I SO ACKNOWLEDGES
R£( RIVING G1I IS
FIGURE IT OUT YOURSELF
a--------- o "
KINEK-JENKINN Nl PTIALS
Miss Dorothy Irene Kiser of SOUTHERN OREGON Ml.VF.lt
Awhiand and William C. Jenkin» Published every Thursday at 167
of Camp White were married Sat­ East Main S'., Ashland. Oregon
urday evening at the home of the by Charles and Ruth Giffen.
bride’» parent». Mr. and Mrs Wm
Office I*hone 8561
FDR ¿ayi:
Mr» Jewell Lockhart, ii»»l»tant
director at the Ashland USO, re­
port» the foliowinx contributions
received al (the Anhliuid center
during the pant week
Coat hanger» from Mm Gladys
Gale. Magazine» from Htephrn
Boyer, Mm P 8. Provost, Mr.
Maxwell, Mr». A. W Thomas, Dr.
Pulii
Arthur 8. Taylor, Mm
Travis Cake» from the Hospital
Auxiliary represented by M es-
dame» Paul F.nnel), A. C. DeMer,
W, C. IJndaey, and Roger Ruth.
Cookie» from Mis. Frank Culp
representing the Junior League,
and from the Plymouth Guild of
the Congregational Church.
Two lug» of apricots from Mr»
K. C Gardner. Jams, pickle» and
fruit Juices from Mr*. Ruth Dew»,
Mr». Mabel Hazelwood, Mr». Mal­
colm Cady. Cash from Mendamen
Uirkin Grubb .Ernest Cassel, Karl
Leever, W. H. Parker, Rose Wei­
nert, and Ella Leonard.
li f
Thursday, August 12, 1943
I hope Americans
will figure out for
t li <• m I veg addi­
tional payroll sav­
ings.
Kiner. The Rev L. D. Smith, pan- HubM-ription rate»: *2.00 par year
tor of the N'azarene Church read Entered as second-class matter la
the marriage line».
the post office at Ashland, Oregon
February 15. 1935 under the act
of March 3 1879.
SEND US YOUR LAUNDRY BUNDLE
AND RELAX THESE HOT DAYS.
♦ ♦
GREEN SLABS
I
I
FOK
Immediate
Delivery
You can save fuel and physical energy
by sending your clothes to the laundry.
VVe do the job efficiently and cheap too!
Try our Rough Dry Service
You’ll be Pleased
PHONE 5751
GUNTER FUEL CO.
' —■
| SEND < IIRINTMAM M AIL MOON
The period between September
15 and (Xrlober 31 him been »et a»
the time for mailing Christmea
package» to member of the U. 8.
Nuvy, Marine Corp» and Coast
Guard who are nerving overseas,
the Navy Department has an­
nounced
AUTOMOBILE
7'7'74
FIKE
INSURANCE
"That you can depend on”
JUST LIKE THAT. EASY ISN’T IT?
HEALTH A ACCIDENT
LIFE
Mrs. Charles M. Giffen and
daughter, Ann Marie, returned
home Sunday evening from a visit
with Mrs Giffen's parents Mr.
and Mrs. H W. Savin at Cozad,
Nebraska.
ASHLAND LAUNDRY COMPANY
ON THE PI.AZA
I
Wirt M. Wright, Prop.
Phone 7771
M. T. BURNS
: 31 Water St.
mW WHAM
ìì i i.i
LOOK A4
DRIVE A
GREYHOUND BUS
wi* JOSDHINf HUOOLISTON
When it comes to color, Joseph’s
coat had nothing on the multi-col-
or<-d patchwork designs created by
the case-making clothes moth when
it spins the portable case in which
it spends practically all its larva«
life.
“Prolonged study of the habits of
this case-making clothes moth re­
veals it to be a first class dress-
maker, being able to enlarge its
case by the insertion of little gores
as it t>ecomes plump on our bright
sweaters or fine furs.
’’Without leaving its case the
larva makes a slit halfway down
one side and inserts a triangular
gore of new material, possibly from
little Johnny’s red sweater. A simi­
lar insertion is made on the oppos­
ite side, if the larva is restless «nd
moves from Johnny’s red sweater
to your vellow one, this gure will
be a different color. Still without
leaving its case, the larva reverses
itself and makes corresponding
slits and additions in the other half.
The case in lengthened by success­
ive additions to either end
...YOU’LL LIKE IT!
I
Men with children get into
this essential industry!
W
W
»V
»
V V
W « .
» W
v
V
The World’s News Seen Through
T he C hristian S cience M onitor
I
j >
An International Daily Newspaper
by THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING SOCIETY
One, Norway Street. Boston, Massachusetts
11 Truthful—Constructive—Unbiased—Free from Sensational-
1Mn — Editorial. Are Timely and Instructive, and Its Daily
Features, Together with the Weekly Magazine Section, Make
the Monitor an Ideal Newspaper for the Home.
Price *12 00 Yearly, or *1.00 a Month.
Saturday Issue, including Magazine Section, *2.60 a Year.
Introductory Offer, 6 Issues 25 Cent*.
Obtainable as:
Christian Science Reading Room
Pioneer Avenue
Ashland, Oregon
Hot Off the Griddle!
Besides being patriotic and essential to the war effort you’ll
find driving a Greyhound bus pleasant, interesting, healthful
and profitable. Here arc some of the many advantages:
★ Training with pay.
★ Group health and life insurance.
★ Good working conditions.
★ Medical care.
★ Excellent w ages.
★ Pension and retirement benefits.
I he case-making clothes moth
doesn't actually do its tailoring
with needle and thread. But, left
where it can nibble on them, it will
use threads from your precious
woolens for making the cocoon or
portable case in which it spends
most of its larvae life.
Greyhound also needs men and women in these
and other occupations:
Auto Trimmers
Auto Mechanics
Ticket Clerks
Auto Electrician)
Body X Fender Men Clerical Help
Express Clerks
Baggage Clerks
Car Washers
Car Cleaners
Janitors
Matrons
APPLY IN PERSON IMMEDIATELY TO AGENT:
PACIFIC
i
i
GREYHOUND
101 EAST MAIN ST., ASHLAND
«
I
AMERICA LATER
'
I
i
All of which reminds us of some
facts about the safe storage proper­
ties of cedar chests—and a miscon­
ception about ’’moth-killing.”
1) Cedar chests do not kill adult
moths. However, moths don’t like
the odor of cedar and it's practi­
cally impossible to get them into
a cedar chest.!
2) Moths don’t eat fabrics. In­
stead, it is the moth larvae, or
moth children in their early stages,
that cause fabric damage.
It is to prevent even a minimum
larvae-grazing period after hatch­
ing that cedar chest manufacturers
urge that all garments and articles
be cleaned or brushed thoroughly
and aired before being stored in
cedar chests.
Once freed from all eggs or lar­
vae—and placed in a cellar chest
before being exposed to egg de-
posits again—such things are safe'
‘Facts taken from Farmerb Bulle­
tin 1363.
's BREAD
’.r>
*
THE NON-FATTENING
■FOOD
*V~ ■
Golden French Toast Bars are one of the interesting new things you
can make with vitamin-enriched white bread. Good? Just try them
for breakfast, lunch or supper! They’re a real rationstretcher, too.
by Kathrine W^llingbrook
OI'R family will “eat hearty” when French Toast Bars
come to the table, even though the rest of the menu is
Y ration-slim.
ChilTon-tender, inside a crispy coat, French Toast
Bars are so good everybody will want io eat and eat. . . .
Let ’em! French Toast is a good
supplier of proteins, the body's
"building blocks". Two ordinary
slices (or three bars, as shown in
the picture) supply as much pro­
tein as half a pork chop.
That's why French Toast, in bars
or slices, makes an excellent main
dish. Serve it with fresh green and
yellow vegetables—and for an extra
dash of flavor, add a bit of bacon,
sausage, or fried salt pork cubes.
Vitamins, Too
French Toast is usually made
from white bread, and now all white
bread is enriched with important
vitamins and mineral*.
This means that French Joast
for breakfast, lunch or supper, will
help step up your daily intake of
vitamin B l. other B-vitamins. and
the food-mineral iron, needed for
good red blood.
Enriched white bread is such a
g "d source of vit: •■■In B-l that two
slices at every
es you 38%
of your dailv i
<t.
How To Make It
Whether you’re making French
Toast Bars or serving it in the
form of slices, dip the bread in the
following mixture then fry it to a
golden brown in hot fat:
1 or 2 eggs, beaten slightly
1 cup milk
*4 teaspoon salt
To make Barg ... cut a loaf of
enriched white bread int inch­
thick slices, allowing one slice for
each serving. Remove crusts and cut
each slice into thirds. Soak in egg-
and milk mixture. Deep fry In hot
fat; or pan fry, turning each bar so
that it browns beautifully on all
four sides.
For Dessert ... or for breakfast
MTV* the hot toast with honey,
maple or > corn syrup, molasses,
sorghum, preserves, or tart Jelly.
Spices may be added to the egg-an<l-
milk mixture: *4 -teaspoon cinna­
mon
’4 teaspoon allspice, nut­
meg or mace.