Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 10, 1932, Page 3, Image 3

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    MEDFORD IIXH- TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON", MONDAY. OCTOBER 10, 1932.
PAGE THREE
I
FOR HOI DIET
AID 10 HEALTH
During these early fall dayi the
question of how to serve tomatoes
Is a pressing one to all housewives,
not only to those having access to
i&ome-grown ones, but to those
tempted with the quantities new
appearing In the market. The to
mato, popular long before lta great
nutritive value was realized, Is now
considered one of the most valuaole
foods in the American diet.
The food value of the tomato Is
much the same as that of the orange,
grapefruit and lemon, being rich In
vitamins A, B and C. Because of
lta richness In the vitamins and of
the 'fact that Its content of vitamin
O Is not reduced much, If any, by
canning, It has been widely used
In recent years. They are excellent
for adding flavor to the more bland
foods like rice, macaroni, etc.
Tomatoes can be wed in many
different ways raw, cooked or
canned they can be served at any
meal or in any part of a meal. Cream
of tomato soup la always a favorite
and makes a good main lunch dish
for the school child's lunch. A de
licious luncheon salad la made by
stuffing tomato cups with cottage
cheese and adding a amall amount
of green pepper or onion for season
ing and serving on crisp let tee. A
tomato cream sauce to serve with
meat loaf, with steak, macaroni or
rice, Is made as follows:
2 cups tomatoes. '
yA bay leaf.
1 sprig thyme.
1 slice onion.
yB teaspoon soda
Va teaspoon salt.
teaspoon paprika.
1 cup medium white sauce.
Add the seasonings to the tomatoes
and simmer IB minutes. Rub through
a sieve, add soda and pour slowly
Into t.he white sauce.
There are literally scores of ways
to use tomatoes because they com
bine well with so many foods. Here
are some new tricks with tomatoes
which are sure to please:
Baked Ebrs In Tomato Cupa
Scoop out the center of large, firm,
ripe tomatoes. Sprinkle the tomato
cupa lightly on the Inside with salt
and dot with butter. Break an egg
into each tomato. Sprinkle with salt,
pepper, fine dry bread crumbs and
dot generously with butter. Bake In
a moderate oven (350 degreea P.)
until, the tonwto aklna are allg-htly
wrinkled.
Tomatoes, Corn and Cheese on Toast
3 teaspoons flour.
4 teaspoons melted butter.
2 teaspooons salt.
1 onion.
2 cups tomatoes, fresh cooked,
2 cups corn, fresh cooked.
14 lb. sharp cheese, shaved thin.
Brown the flour In a frying pan,
remove from the -frying pan and
blend with 3 tbspn butter. Brown
the onion in the remaining butter,
add other ingredients except cheese
and cook; for 10 minutes. Stir in
the cheese and wihen melted serve
on thin crisp toast.
VOTERS REGISTRY
AVAILABLE SOON
Figures on the Jackson county reg
istration which closed Saturday night,
will not be available for a couple of
days. There was a heavy registration
but the total will be cut, from the
original estimate, as a large number
of cancellations were received Fri
day and Saturday, due to voters mov
ing from one precinct to another,
since the primary.
Any abnormal Increase of voter. In
the country districts will be checked
by the county clerk, particularly n
the Evans creek and Talent districts,
where a number of "squatters" set
tled last July. The cards will be
checked to determine If the new reg
istrants have been In the state and
county the required six months to be
legal voters.
HOLD VOTER INTEREST
The Jackson county Republican
central committee ask that eveTy
man and woman in southern Oregon
Interested In the Issues before the
people In this campaign, arrange to
tune in on KMED tomorrow. Tuesday,
rvenlng, at 6:15 to 6:43, and hear
George Neuner, U. S. district attor
ney. Several radio parties are being ar
ranged for this occasion. It la sug
gested that people call In their
neighbors, who do not have radios, to
listen to this address.
Joe Scott of California, who nom
inated President Hoover at the Chi
cago convention, will speak over
KGW at Portland this evening at
10:15.
4
La Grande Opens
Fine New Airport
LA GRANDE. Ore., Oct. 10. W)
Rankin Field. LaOrande'a new mu
nicipal airport, was dedicated here
Sunday w'.th more than 1,000 per
sons attending the ceremony.
Rankin Field is declared by aviators
to be one of the largest and best
equipped In eastern Oregon.
Carl's Quick Lunch. 105 E. 8th 8t
Good chill and hamburger.
Makes You Forget
You Have False Teeth
Don't wrry about your falw teeth
rookinit. slipping or Wabbling. Fm
teetii, a new improved powder, holds
them firm and comfortable all day.
No Booey. paty taste or lplln?. Eat
lAush snd talk with comfort. Get
FaAteeth from Jarmia & Wood or
your druggist
Society and Clubs
Edited by Eoa Nealon
Local Members Attend
Daughters of Nile Meet.
A number of local members of Zu
lelma temple. Daughters of the Nile,
motored to Grants Pasa Saturday for
the meeting of the temple at the
Masonic hall In that city. In he
group were Mrs. W. H. McGowan. Mrs.
Charles T. Sweeney, Miss Gertrude
Weeks, Mrs. Dade Terrett, Mrs. A. E.
Peasley, Mrs. E. A. Early, Mrs. G. R.
Chapman, Mrs. Bessie Lumsden, Mrs.
Stella Merrick, Mrs. Maude Holmes,
Mrs. Charles Gilbert. Mrs. Howard
Scheffel, Mrs. Frank Dillard and Mrs.
Charles Gates. Mrs. E. 8. Severance
and Miss Mollle Brltt also attended
from Jacksonville.
The all-day meeting was divided
by a lovely luncheon served by the
Cave Shop at the Masonic hall.
Junior League Adds
Several Well-Known Nnmea
Of interest to Medford society folk
was the list of smart young Port
lander announced aa new members
of the Junior league In yesterday's
Oregonlan. For In the list were the
names and the pictures of several
society misses and matrons, who are
well known here. In the photograph,
which covers the main portion of the
society section first page, appear Mrs.
Thos. H. Mills, a former resident of
Medford and a very recent visitor at
the home of Colonel and Mrs. Gor
don Voorhles; Mlssea Edna Ellen Bell
and Gretchen and Caroline Corbett.
who also have friends In Medford.
Kenaston-Johnson
Wedding Told
Announcements have been received
here of the wedding In Modesto, Cal.,
September 21, of Mabel Clare Ken
aston and Earl Johnson. The service
was read at the Methodist parsonage
by the Reverend McCarthy, the bride
and groom being attended by Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Smith of Medford. 1
Mrs. Johnson is the only daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Kenaston of
Gold Hill and a sister of Ray Ken
aston of that city and of Robert
Kenaston of the United States ma
rines. Installation Draws
Attention of Auxiliary.
Tonight will be Installation night
for the local post of the American
Legion and the Women's Auxiliary,
ao members of the latter group are
devoting their time today to last
minute arrangementa for the even
ing's festivities.
Installation will be held at the
Kntghte of Pythias hall. Installing
officers will be Mrs. Waive Enders of
Ashland, district president.
Installation will be followed by
dancing and refreshments will be
served at the close of the evening.
Society Groups
Attend Celebration
The town of Yreka was the gather
ing place Saturday of many local
people who motored to the northern
California town for the Gold Rush
celebration. Among those attending
from here, in addition to the Crater
caravan, were Mr. and Mrs. Lee Wil
liams and children, Mrs. Lewis Ul
rlch, Mrs. R. C. Mulholland, Mr. and
Mrs. W. M. Clemenson and Misses
Maurin Carroll, Carln Degermark
and Gertrude Watzling .
Baptist Ladles'
Auxiliary to Meet
The Ladles Auxiliary of the First
Baptist church will meet tomorrow
afternoon at 2:30 at the home of
Mrs. C. E. Kelzur, 23 Almond street.
At the meeting plans for the rum
mage and food sale to be held this
week will be discussed. Mrs. J. S.
Miner, Mrs. Ida W. Jacoby and Mrs.
Kelzur will entertain during the so
cial hour.
Pythian Sisters
Go to Convention
A group of local Pythian Sisters
left ' yesterday morning with Mrs.
Thos. Judge by motor for Portland,
where they will attend the Pythian
Sisters' state convention this week.
In the party were Mrs. Wm. Swartz,
Mrs. W. L. Walden, Mrs. H. O. Wort
man and Miss Cora Judge and her
mother, Mrs. Thos. Judge.
D. A. R. Chapter Plans
To Entertain Speaker
Mrs. Volney Dixon la hostess today
to members of the executive board
of Crater Lake chapter, D. A. R. Plans
for the entertainment of Mrs. John
Y. Richardson, regent of the Oregon
society. Daughters of the American
Revolution, will be made at the meet
ing. Mrs. Richardson, who la described
by all local folk who have heard er
as a brilliant and Inspiring speaker,
will address the Medford public at
the Jackson county courthouse, Fri
day afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. Na
tional defense and communistic ac
tivities will be the subject of her
address.
Mrs. Maurltz
Returns Home.
Mrs. T. N. Maurltz of Ganado, Tex.,
who has been spending the past sev
eral weeks in Medford s the guest
of relatives, left on the Shasta to
day, en route to her home. Mrs. Mau
rltz was the guest of Mr. and Mrs.
D. O. Llndsey, their daughters. Miss
Alta and Miss Lois, and Mrs. L. C.
Llndsey.
Crater Lake Guild
Banquet Is Tonight.
Annual banquet of Crater Lake
Guild of the Presbyterian church will
be held this evening at 6:30 at the
church and many plans are being
completed for the affair, which will
be followed by an Important business
session.
Wehrlls Visit
In Medford.
Guests In Medford yesterday from
Ashland were Mr. and Mrs. William
Wehrli, who visited Mrs. Paul Greiner,
who later In the afternoon enjoyed
a drive about the valley with them.
Reomes Chapter
Plane Social Night.
Wednesday will be social night for
Reames chapter, O. E. S. Bridge will
be played and cards followed by re
freshments. Mrs. Maude West is
chairman of the committee for the
affair and a good attendance is urged.
nubbards Close
Lake Cahln
Mr. and Mrs. Roland Hubbard and
children spent yesterday at Diamond
lake and closed their summer house
there for the winter season.
By ROIlltlN COONS,
HOLLYWOOD (AP) What's to be
come of Jean Harlow now?
Next to solution of the mystery
elements In the apparent suicide of
her husband, Paul Bern, that Is the
question that is being debated by
Hollywood, where studio talk of pic
tures, players, plots and plans fades
into silence before the real-life trag
edy that stunned the town a few
weeks ago.
The platinum blond, silken Jean
Harlow, who rose to her greatest fame
in a red wig hiding her platinum
crown, was working on a picture when
tragedy struck. The film was "Red
Catholic Women
Announce Card Party.
Society folk with a special liking
for cards are Invited to Parish hall
Wednesday evening, where the worn
eh of the Catholic church will en
tertain. Playing will begin at 8
o'clock and will be followed by re
freshments. Mrs. L. Hunter and her
committee will act as hostesses.
P. E. O. Luncheon
To Be Wednesday
Luncheon will be served at the
Hotel Medford at 12:45, Wednesday,
October 12, by chapter AA, P. E. O.
Sisterhood, honoring Mrs. Jessie E.
Dodge of Ashland, state organizer.
Following the luncheon a meeting of
chapter AA will be held at the home
of Mrs. E. A. Moore, 243 South Holly.
HIS STOMACH TROUBLE
HEALED AT LAST
After suffering twenty years with a
bad case of stomach trouble which
finally developed ulcers. Mr. F. W.
Meyer of Nanticoke, Pennsylvania, re
ports that he i completely recovered
throueh the use of a simple home
treatment. He says he had spent
thousands of dollars and had under
gone a surgical operation, without any
permanent relief, when a Trlend rec
ommended the treatment which per
formed a "miracle" for him, and r.ow
he wants all other sufferers to know
about it.
Mr. Meyer advises all sufferers from
stomach trouble, stomach ulcers, gas
tritis, dyspepsia. Indigestion, exces
sive gas. heartburn or gnawing pains
after eating, due to excess acid or
faulty diet, to try tWs mervelors
treatment. This they can do with
out the risk of a single penny under
our lronclald. mony-back euarantee.
Just send name and address at once
to tJstda, Inc.. 1640 Foot-Sehulze
B'.dtr . St. Paul, Minn. Th: company
is offering the same treatment which
produced siwh splendid results for
Mr. Myr to all stomach sufferers
on 15 days trial at their own risk,
also a free book explaining the cause
and treatment of various stomach
disorders, including stomih ulcers,
testimonials, a sworn affidavit of gr
plnenesa and their 1.000 00 Reward
Offer. If you suffer, write today.
Adv. .
STEEL ORDERS
SHOW INCREASE
NEW YORK, Oct. 10. ( AP) Un
filled orders of the United States
steel corporation Increased 15,495 tons
In September to a total of 1,985,090
tons on September 30. August ton
nage gained 3293 tons, but prior to
this the corporation had reported 16
consecutive monthly decreases.
Early estimates on the September
increase In the backlog ranged from
about 50,000 to 100,000 tons, though
in the last few days it was generally
anticipated that the gain would be
considerably leas than 60,000 tons.
JACKSONVILLE P.-T. A.
IN BUSINESS MEETING
JACKSONVILLE, Oct. 10. (Spl.)
Jacksonville P.-T. A. met October 7
for a business meeting. The execu
tive committee elected Mrs. Hewett
secretary, filling the vacancy left by
Miss Loral ne Sparr.
It was decided to purchase a fern
to he awarded to the room having
the highest percentage of parents and
friends present at the meeting each
month.
Next P.-T. A. meeting will be N
vember 4, at 8 p. m.
Korean Bomber
Pays With Life
TOKYd, Oct. 10. (AP) LI Ho-Sho,
the Korean who recently was con
victed of an attempt to bomb the
carriage of Emperor Hlrohlto last
January 3, was executed today at
Tchlgaya prison.
Mention of the method of execu
tion used was forbidden.
f
Manchuria Crisis
Forbids Holiday
NANKING, Oct. 10. (AP) China's
most important holiday, the 21st an
niversary of the establishment of the
republic, was not observed today.
A government order said : "The
Manchurlan crisis necessitates giving
attention to the national Balvatlon
instead of to fun and amusement."
THUrsday
FRIday
SATurday
West Side
Pharmacy
The ftnuxtt Drug Store
What Now for Jean Harlow?
Hollywood Ponders Question
Hollywood?" The situation In the
film in some ways suggest the plight
of Jean Harlow now.
It ts the story of a film star whose
spectacular success was ended through
the suicide In her home of a director
she had befriended. In the picture
gossips tore at the star until further
work on the screen was impossible.
The picture, as Is usual, had a happy
ending. But will Jean Harlow's trag
edy end likewise?
And yet. stunned or not, the movie
mills grind on as usual. Paul Bern,
the "good samarltan of Hollywood."
Is dead, but pictures have to be made,
new stars have to be found, new
stories written. Hollywood, however,
finds its rest for work diminished
now.
Woman Suicide's
Identity Learned
PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 10. (AP)
A woman whose body was found
crushed at the foot of Multnomah
Palls after a fall from the top of a
350-foot cliff, was tentatively identi
fied, police said here today, as a resi
dent of Denver, Colo.
They said Lester Gammon, manager
of a hotel here, read the woman's,
description In the paper, and after
viewing the body at the morgue, iden
tified it as that of a woman who
registered at the hotel September 33
, under the name of R. Carrol of Den
I ver.
w
: so ' s V tH 1
J2L
Jean Harlow, platinum blond of the films, whose rareer was Interrupted
temporarily when her husband, Paul Bern, apparently committed suicide,
will finish the picture, "Red Dust," which she was making at the time of
the tragedy. But Hollywood wonders what the future holds for her.
Dust," and Clark Oable was opposite
her as co-star. The picture la going
on. For ten days or ao the cameras
will grind without her the "shooting
around the star" expedient often used
when stars become 111 or for another
reason cannot work.
And at the studio they Insist she
will be back before the cameras,
health permitting, to finish the pic
ture. But will it be the finish of a
spectacularly begun career that day
when the last scene of "Red Dust"
la made.
And was "truth stranger than fic
tion" forecast on the screen in Con
stance Bennett's picture, "What Price
1 -TZ
VIS. MR.FISK IS COMINO TO SEC
MC TONIGHT BUT HE'LL Bt LIKI ALL
THE BEST.. .CALL. ..TAKE ME OUT
ONCE. PERHAPS. ..THEN DRIFT AWAY..
I CAN'T SEEM TO HOLD MY FRIEN0S
IP I 9IVI YOU A LITTll HINT
ABOUT SOMETHING, PfiOMISt
NOT TO BE ANGRY
II.
NO'B.O.'TO SPOIL thU ROMANCE
MAMA, I KNOW A --V
rf 1 acRrr. aunty's V'TX
V, ft Wfc GOING TO HARRY r
l A -T 1 MR.riSK.IHI L. 1
!(OL C " (V MV,IU t '
A er M I R FtOWI R Nsi J ,
AWVBrSlllv G'RL AN0 CARRY
" S'n5. ?s. A BOUQUET A-A
MML m
Chill, Tamalea and Hamburger,
Carl's Quiclt Lunch, opposite Lewie
Super Service.
2 WEEKS LATER
MOW HUMILIATING TO BE WARNED
ABOUT -B.O.'I BUT WHAT A RELIEF TO
KNOW LIFEBUOY KEEPS ME SAFE FROM
OFFENDING. IT MADE MY SKIN SO MUCH
CLEARER. TOO... TOM COMPLIMENTE0 HE
ON MY COMPLEXION LAST NIGHT
"B.O." may threaten
(body odor)
YOUR happiness, too
YOU can't dodge facts. The pores of every nor
mal person give off a quart of odor-causing
waste dally. No one Is safe from offending unless
precautlonsaretsken.BatheregularlywtthLlfebuoy.
Its pleaiant, quickly-vanishing, hygienic scent tells
you, "Here is no ordinary toilet soapl" Lifebuoy
gives you extra protection. Its creamy, searching
lather oeodoriwj pores stops "B.O." (.body odor).
Freshens complexion
Lifebuoy's bland, pene
trating lather gently
cleanses face pores of
clogged Impurities
makes dull skins glow
with health. Adopt
Lifebuoy today.
A fkoduct op lives bros. co.
omit let
71
M
Yotj might think that a two-fisted fellow
like the steel jack in the picture would
like his tohacco strong. Not at all.
He wants his cigarettes mild and
that's why he picks Chesterfields.
Mildness doesn't mean a smoke that's
weak or flat or insipid or anything like
that. In fact it's just the reverse. Two
fisted fellows as well aa anyone else
men and women want a cigarette that's
mild . . . one that satisfies and that's
Chesterfield.
Te believe that every smoker is look
ing for a cigarette without any "bite"
or bitterness, and a cigarette that has a
pleasing taste and that's Chesterfield.
Cliatcrfinld Radio Program
Every night except Sunday, Columbia
Coast-to-Coast Network.
THEY'RE MILDER
THEY TASTE BETTER
"
IS ml, Lugitt MTiu.IpBaUfL&).
, sf& u tlx r ; Fffe' ) :
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