Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, March 09, 1944, Image 3

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    SOT TTHERN OREGON MTNER
APPEARING AT IIIE I.'Till \
Munday - Monday - Tiiraday
Thursday, March 9, 1944
GI'EMT AT l»R. BRUCE JIGME
The Rev. 8. 8. Hotchkiss, pas­
SOI THKIIN SKKtiON MINER
Subscription rates: *2.00 |>e, year
tor of the Methodist Church at Published every Thursday at 167
Entered as second-class matter ia
Elkton, Oregon, at the present Cast Main S ., Ashland. Oregoi
the post office at Ashiand. Oregon
time conducting the revival meet­ by Charles and Ruth Giffen
February 15. 1935 under the act
ing in the Methodist Church at
Office Phone 8561
of March 3 1879.
Talent. Oregon, was a house guest
of Dr. and Mrs. G W Bruce
Nation«! Advar
Representative
Tuesday night and Wednesday,
The revival meeting in Talent
NEWSPAPER ADAEIITJSING SERVICE, INC
will dose this coming Sunday
(•"
of tht I
•
j Neftond Edito; «I Astociation)
evening, with the message by Rev.
Hotchkiss
<
yN. A. S J
Serving America’/ Advertiteri end/he Home Town Newspapers
IMW. UmMpk —Chice«« I.M. • •VOICES • Hoftxoo* Mdg S« F-.ocitcoCU.
WlLfu/ßÄ.
IN THE KITCHEN
Old Mattresses made
Oxer Like New
New Mattresses Made to
Order
Mr. and Mrs Allen McGee situ:
a special number ut the Revival
meetings at Talent, Tuesday even
Ing.
************
Like to feel
important?
voiJU. BE important
your country, and to your
fighting men
if you take
over a vital job in the Army
In the Women's Army Corps
you'll get expert Army train­
ing that may pave the way to
a postwar career You'll have
a chance to improve your skill
or learn a new one to meet
new people, see new places,
have experiences you’ll re­
member nil your life.
* Get full details about the
WAC ut any IJ 8 Recruiting
Station ()r write for interest-
Ing booklet. Address The Ad-
jutant General, 4415 Muni-
tlons Bldg , Washington 25,
D. C (Women in essential war
industry must have release
from their employer or the
U 8 Employmen" Service.)
REED’S
MATTRESS CO.
93 N. Main
Ph. 6271
Ashland, Oregon
SEE US FOR YOUR
INSURANCE
CRIME DOESN'T “AY Not
in tho
kitchen. Are you guilty of things (ike this?
SUSPENSE
/'■'ROCHET the e cotton glove "shorties" In your pet sports color.
Make them for active days during those long winter evenings at
home. You’ll And them colorful with sport clothes, yet trim enough
foi die ier o< < asions Also In the leaflet are directions for making a
pair of knitted gloves. The cost of making the pair Is about sixty cents,
Directions may be obtained by sending a stamped, self addressed
envelope to the Needlework Department of this paper, specifying
design # 2720.
,
IF
you expect to be paid
for damage to your
home, your household
goods, or your auto­
mobile, be sure to get
your insurance before
a loss occurs.
Better have your in­
surance checked NOW
by this agency.
Billings Agency
REAL ESTATE and
REAL INSURANCE
Phone 8781
41 East Main
There’s suspense in this "Who
Dun It,” but there’s no mystery as
to who committed the crime.
This housewife is anxiously wait­
PHONE 5751
ing for the cauliflower to cook, but
she might lust as well relax and
count this day lost. It’s as lifeless
as an autumn leaf and just as brown,
for she’s murdered Vitamin C. And ♦::«"e::e;:e::e:;«”e::e"e"e"O"e:»::e"e”e:x>"ere"«<
ignorance of the laws of good nutri­
tion is no excuse.
“Cauliflower” say home econo­
mists at Revere’s Experimental
Kitchen” must be cooked with care.
Long soaking in water before cook­
ing, destroys Vitamin C, because it’s
water-soluble. Rinse the flowerettes
quickly in running water and cook
covered in a small amount of boiling
water. Add a little lemon juice to
keep the cauliflower snowy white.
GUNTER FUEL CO
us."
The number of company owned
and operated telephones passed
the two and one-half million mark
in July 1943, totaling at the end
of the year 2.568,432. In a period
Details of the precedent shat- of about three and one-half years,
lering year 1943, in which tele- the net increase has amounted to
phone service was geared to meet 568,432 telephones. The first mil­
the enormous acceleration of war lion was reached in 1923, 46 years i were 4349 employes in the Armed
activities and industrialization on .«iter telephone service was es­ Forces; one out of every three
the Pacific Coast, are related in tablished on the Pacific Coast, men on the payroll.
In tribute to the telephone em­
the annual report to shareholders and the second
million was
ployes, Powley said: "While our
of the Pacific Telephone and Tele­ reached in 1940.
•
graph Company, issued by N. R.
Proceeding at a rapidly accel- men and women on the home
Powley, president.
•rAted pace until retarded by re- front wear no uniform, they, in
"To contribute its utmost to the itrictions on the use of materials, tjieir devotion to duty in a prece­
winning of the war, our com- the net increase for the year was dent breaking year with its many
puny's fundamental objective dur­ 187,002 telephones, the largest in- perplexities and obstacles, have I
ing the past year hua been to ren­ rease recorded in one year in the shown by their faithful and effi­
der and to maintain a service History oi the company. There cient »work that they are fully
which would meet fully the war were at the end of the year cognizant of and alert to the de­
demands of our Nation," Powley 77,100 unfilled applications for pendence placed upon them. The
stated. "Notwithstanding the main telephones and additional directors and officers are proud
shortages of critical materials and lines and 16,800 unfilled applica­ of the record of our personnel and
express to them grateful appre­
the difficulties of obtaining ade- tions for other items.
(plate operating personnel, we suc-
"Toll and - long distance calls ciation. They take pleasure also
cessfully met the teephone re- increased more than 55,700,000 or in thanking an understanding
quire merits of our Government. 27 per cent over the previous all- and friendly public for its most
helpful co-operation and for the
the military, civilian defense and t.me high volume of 1942.
the Industries vital to the war ef-
Opeiating taxes continued to i many commendatory comments
forL The civilian demands, the rise in 1943, reaching a total of regarding the rendition of our
highest of record, could not, of I $47,445,170, an increase of $13.03- service."
The report is being distributed
necessity, be met in full due to i 4,224. or 38 per’ cent over 1942.
the imperative essential war needs Total operating taxes took 65 here to employes of the company
and the unavailability of mater­ cents of each dollar of net oper­ as a factual account of the im­
ials for new construction and for ating revenue, and were equival­ portant part they are taking in
the manufacture of new apparat- ent to $19.28 per common share, the war, said R. B. Hammonds,
or nearly three times the earnings manager of the Ashland exchange.
per common share. Expressed in
XX EST OREGON IJXESTOCK
I
relation to the average number
I
of telephones in service in 1943, MEN SET MEETING DATES
The XVestern Oregon Livestock
the taxes were equivalent to
$19.07 per telephone, or $1.59 per association has picked April 4 and
telephone per month. Ten years 5 as the dates for its annual
ago they were equivalent to $5.55 meeting, to be held at Eugene,
per common share and to $6 98 according to notices sent out by
per t elephone per year, or 58 H. A. Lindgren, extension animal
husbandman and secretary-treas-
cents per telephone per month.
Wages constituted the largest t rer of the association.
All livestock growers in west­
item of cost of rendering tele­
phone service, being 65 per cent ern Oregon, wh^her members of
of operating expenses less taxes. the association or'not, are invited
Average weekly earnings of em­ to attend the meeting, says Lind­
ployes were, as was the pavroll, gren.
the highest in the history ot the
company.
On the payrolls at the end of
the year were 43,174 employes,
1488 more than the previous year.
Women constituted 72 per cent of
the personnel, compared with 59
per cent five years ago. There
Telephone Co,
* * * ********* !Zas Increases
SLABS
BOLTS-NUTS
FARM & DWELLING
AUTO AND TRUCK
BURGLARY
LIABILITY
HEALTH, ACCIDENT
AND LIFE
J. F. EMMETT
MINER BUILDING
167 EAST MAIN STREET
Phone 85J1
Hints (or tftc
Hcmeiyaiiet
-
By WINIFREy S. CARTER
A St. Patrick's Day Luncheon I available, will bring forth admiring
The time to start thinking about
Spring is just when February
winds are blowing their hardest.
And one of the nicest ways to wel­
come this nicest season of the year
is with a green St. Patrick’s day
luncheon, vflth its promise of the
grass that will soon be sprouting.
Almost everything should be this
spring-y color for your party on
March 17th — the
decorations on
your table and
even much of the
food you serve. A
charming way to
give a St. Patrick's touch to your
table is to spread a lot of feathery
ferns over a white cloth. For a
twinkling "extra” put a tiny, white
birthday-cake candle stuck in a
flat green gumdrop in front of
each plate.
Your first course is as green as
old Ireland itself—fruit cocktails
made of chilled grapefruit sprin­
kled liberally with crushed green
after-dinner mints.
There’s the St. Patrick note in
your main course, too. Ordinary
biscuits cut into the shape of sham
rocks and a simple lettuce salad
dressed up with cucumbers, if
looks. With these dishes should go
hearty, but feathery, chicken short­
cakes and a light sweet-potato
souffle that will show that you’re
just as good, or better, cook than
you are a decorator.
Dessert is easy. Just serve green
mint sherbet with plain cakes or
a Time gelatine pudding molded
into gay shapes—and end your
luncheon on the same merry green
note with which it began.
Here is the recipe for individual
chicken short-cakes—a good dish to
serve in these days of meat ra­
tioning:
2
3
4
1
1
cups flour
teaspoons baking powder
tablespoons Crisco
tablespoon sugar
egg mixed with H cup watet
teaspoon salt
Sift together flour, baking pow
der, salt and sugar. Add Crisco and
mix in thoroughly with fork. Add
liquid slowly to make soft dough.
Roll or pat out on floured board
to *4 inch in thickness. Cut with
large biscuit cutter, first dipped in
flour. Place on slightly greased pan
and bake in hot oven (475 degrees
F.) 10 to 12 minutes. Split biscuits,
put creamed chicken between layers
and on top garnish with parsley.
AS ALWAYS THE VERY BEST IN
WORKMANSHIP
AND THE MOST COURTEOUS
TREATMENT
We appreciate your patronage
WARDROBE CLEANERS
On the Plaza
Phone 3281
Any Kind, Size
Or Length
IN MEDFORD
LN THE MIDDLE OF THE BUSIEST BLOCK
Iron and Steel ordere up
to
¥10.00 require no priority.
OCR COMPLETE LINE
WILL SUPPLY YOUR NEEDS
Oak Street Garage
and Machine Shop
YOUR FAVORITE CUT-RATE
PRESCRIPTIONS
DRUGS
VITAMINS
SUNDRIES
TOILETRIES
TOBACCOS
CIGARETTES
STATIONERY
WESTERN THRIFT STORE
30 North Central
Phone Medford 3874
j