MEDTOTJD MAIL TRIBUXE, MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 1933 PA OF THREE Society and Clubs Edited by Eca Nealon Hamilton Clever Party Announces Date Stone-Knickerbocker Wedding Mrs. Paul Dlzney entertained Mon day at the home of Mrs. Charles Ellis with a clever bridge party, an nouncing the wedding date of her sister Miss Thelma Stone, who will be married to Eramett Knickerbocker of Bend on Easter Sunday. The ceremony will be read at 2:30 o'clock at the St. Mark's church, Episcopal. The announcement was conveyed to the guests through Jig saw puzzles which when completed, told the story of the bethrothal and the date ot the wedding. A puzzle was placed at each bridge table. The room of the Bills home were decorated In Japanese quince and daffodils for the occasion and prizes, following bridge, weip awarded Miss Stone, honor guest. Miss Thelma Moore and Miss Helen Bush. Guests for the pleasant party were Misses Ruth Koozer, Alice Roberts, Helen Roberta, Mildred Dugan, Dor othy Ness, Kathleen Ness, Marian Ness, Margaret Wood, Dee Scheffel. Jane McOuat. Thelma Moore, Ber nlce Gill and Helen Bush, and Mrs. V. W. Scheffel, Mrs. W. H. Wood. Mrs. C. W. Ellis and the honor guest. Miss Stone. Mrs. Swem Honored At Birthday Party Mrs. Jack Swem was pleasantly sur prised yesterday when the members of tM astrology class entertained with a luncheon, honoring her birthday, at the beautiful country home of Mrs. Clayton Isaacs. Presumably to gather wild flowers, Mrs. Swem was Invited on a drive through the coun try. The drive ended at the Isaacs home where luncheon tables awaited the group. Flowering almonds and daffodils created a lovely setting for the luncheon, which was followed by the legular meeting of the class. Present were: Mrs. Swem, Mrs. I. P. Andres, Mrs. R. W. Frame, Mrs. T. I. Dfwk, Mrs. C. C. Furnas, Mrs. W. W. Howard, Mrs. Effle Herbert Yeoman and Mrs. Olayton Isaacs. , . Party Celebrates Birthdays of Two Talent On Thursday evening Miss Ha Hill and Mr. Clarence Homes were very pleasantly surprised with an evening at cards in honor of their birthdays at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Homes. Those enjoying the play were Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Conner, Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Burnett. Mr. and Mrs. Vlo Mason. Misses Ha- Hill, Bessie Connor and Bertha Hayman; Messrs. Tom Laub, George Connor, Joe Turner, Ralph Hayman. Wiley Hill and I. O. Hill. Friendly Circle Honors Mrs. Den ham Talent On Thursday the Friendly Circle surprised Mrs. Cora Denham at her home. Guests were Mrs. Cynthia Keith, Ida Connor, Bessie Connor, Edith Hayman, Bertha Hay man, Melissa Hill. Ruth Homes, Olive Jacobs, Myrtle Jacobs. Winifred Mason, Lena Stevens and the honor guest, Mrs. Cora Denham. Dinner was served at noon. Garden Club Meets Thursday Evening L. P. Wilcox, horticulturist, will address the Medford Garden club to morrow evening at the meeting at the courthouse auditorium. His sub ject will be "Protection and Care of Shrubs and Plants in Small Gardens." Mrs. Carl Swlgart la program chair man for the evening. Thimble Club Meets At Anderson Home There will be a meeting tonight at the home of Stella Anderson. Nlanttc street, of the Thimble club of Chrysanthemum Circle, No. 84. low OfW will buy a Fun-sized, FuLL-powered KB M MAT ft UNTIL MATERIAL COSTS t Pleasurltes Invite j Guests to Program. Anticipating a good time. "The Pleasurltes," a recreation group for young people, will mec again this Friday evening at 7:30 In the Y. W. C. A. The new committee under the leadership of Miss Mary Sellers, will be In charge. The last meeting- was reported very successful under the new arrangement. Games were played under the di rection of Thomas Newcomb and Miss Anna Jones, and Mrs. Mann ad dressed the group after which all en gaged In a taffy pull. This Friday evening a special pro gram has been arranged. William Vlmont will entertain with the mu sical saw and Clyde Davis will also contribute to the program. The Mills sisters and their group will as sist In the program with a minstrel. Mrs. O. P. Mann will give another Bhort address. These talks have been very Interesting and enjoyed by all. T.he refreshment committee, with Ella May Klrby In charge, Is planning something different for this meeting. The Pleasurltes extend a cordial Invitation to all young people to at tend the meeting. Mrs. Gebhard Hostess to P.-T. A. Council. ' Mrs. W. J. Gebhard was hostess to the executive council of the P.-T. A. Monday afternoon. Reports were presented by various chairmen and plans were discussed for a relief program to be given soon. Mrs. Gebhard served refreshments at the close of the meeting. The regular P.-T. A. meeting will be held Friday afternoon at the school house. . At this meeting the report of the nominating commit tee will be given by Mrs. Stephen son, chairman of the committee. Third grade pupils will give the program and mothers of the sixth grade pupils will serve. The next meeting of the County P.-T. A. council will be held at Prospect, Saturday, April 8. B. P. W. Club To Meet For Thursday Luncheon The regular meeting of the Busi ness and Professional women's club will be held at the city hall club rooms when the group meets for luncheon tomorrow noon. Mrs. I. E. Schuler will Bpeak on the services rendered the community by the Y. W. C. A. A musical program will also be presented and a large at tendance Is urged by the president, Mrs. Edwtna Weishaar. Shriners and Wives To Dine In Ashland A very pleasant evening Is antici pated by southern Oregon Shriners for Friday, when they and their wives will gather In Ashland for a pot luck dinner party at the Masonic tempie. Dancing and cards will follow dinner. Members of HI 11 ah temple and Shrin ers with other temple affiliations, If In this district, are invited to Join In the evening's festivities. The women are requested to bring covered dishes. Clil Omega Banquet Will Be This Evening. The annual formal banquet for members of Ghl Omega sorority in the southern Oregon district will be held In this city this evening at the Hotel Medford at 7 o'clock. Mem bers are expected from Roseburg. Klamath Falls and Ashland to Join the Medford group. Rescverations are to be made with Miss Josephine Koppes, phone 1359. St. Mark's Guild " to Meet Friday. St. Mark's Guild will meet Friday for cafeteria luncheon at 12 :30 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Clyde Eakln. All members are asked to bring their own service. MM Bride Announced for Tom Thumb Wedding Little Miss Betty Ann Conrjy will be the charming bride at the Tom Thumb wedding to be solemnized at the Methodist Episcopal church Fri day evening at 7:30 o'clock, It was announced today. Clark Burk will be the groom and the service will be read by little George Codding Jr. Extensive plans for the favorite pageant of all time are being made under the auspices of the Ladles Aid of the church. Mrs. A. F. Hauser. who is direct ing the wedding here, has presented similar programs In numerous cities of the state and all have met with enthusiastic appreciation. The wed ding was recently staged in Ashland with members of the "very young" set there participating. Very favor able reports have been received from that city and photographs ot the little folks are to be seen In shop windows here. Little Miss Gall Codding will be maid of honor for the trlde and Joe Fllegel Jr., best man for the groom. The ring-bearer wfll be Shir ley Barton and Betty Jean Johnson will act as flower girl. All members of the wedding party will appear in formal dress. Royal Neighbors- " Have Card Party. The Royal Neighbors of America entertained with a card party at their hall last Thursday evening. There were ten tables In play. After an enjoyable evening refreshments were served by the committee In charge, Mrs. Edith Beck, Grace Wakefield, Marie Wells, Nora Glascock, 'Mrs. Balrd, Margaretha Garrett. - Mr. and Mrs. Wells, Guets of Tyrrells. Superintendent and Mrs. . J. P. Wells' of Klamath Falls were Sun day dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Tyrrell. Royal Neighbors to .Meet Thursday. The Royal Neighbors will hold their regular meeting Thursday ev ening. April 6. All members are urged to attend the session. W. R., C. To Meet Thursday Afternoon The Women's Relief Corps will meet Thursday afternoon at 2:00 o'clock at the Medford armory. ALASKANS TOLD OF The gola panning contest has been producing a great deal of publicity for Medford and In addition to the magazines which have already pub lished an Illustrated article, the chamber of commerce has received a copy of the Alaska Weekly contain ing an account of the contest and a picture on the fornt page. The publicity committee of the chamber of commerce will take ad vantage of every opportunity to pub licize the city in a dignified man ner, and Judging from the results ob tained on the gold panning contest alone, Medford should In the course of time be one of the best publicized Giles In Oregon. Wedding Bells Everett Pearl Hutchlngs, 50, and Minerva Holings, 51, both of Medford, secured their license from the county clerk's office Saturday afternoon and were married Immediately afterward by Justice E. W. Madison. He is a truck driver and she a housewife. and It was a second marriage for both. He gave his birthplace as Fresno, Cal., and she hers as Dassel, Minnesota. Grants Pass Courier. - 75c For an 8x10, photo. The Peas- leys, opp. Holly Theater. INSTALLED Plus Freight Standard Model GO UPI Good-bye Mr. Percolator Good Coffee at Last and Good Every Time BY ELLA LEIIR Food newa Is good news! And when a new product or a different way of treating an old standby comes along, I want to get it into headlines! Coffee for instance! I guess we thought all that could be done for coffee had been done; that it was just naturally a temperamental creature with good, bad and lndlfforent moods and that it would continue so. If it were good we thanked our luck. If bad we usually blamed the coffee, sometimes the water. Or de cided to boil up the pot with a pinch of soda or perhaps to change branda! It was accepted like a "cow-lick" or a nose we didn't like and with about as much chance to alter. Drip! Drip! Drip! But here's news that's taken the country by storm. A method that produces a good cup of coffee easily and all the time. Absolutely foolproof and your mother-in-law will rejoice in it as much as you do. For after all it's Friend Husband A letter and circular have been re ceived .here offering $50 reward for Information as to the whereabouts of Charles Benvemito, missing from his home , 266 Cook avenue, Port land, since August 30, 1933. Accord ing to the lad's mother he has been seen In the hills around Jacksonville ' SIP;- M$0mjf ' ' i-JJf , , -.'-j- TODAY the Chesterfield trade-mark is very valuable. Back of it is the good will of thousands perhaps hundreds of thousands of smokers. Chesterfield cigarettes were first manu factured more than twenty-five years ago. At the start, they were 'sold at a loss, but the quantity sold increased steadily from year to year, until now Chesterfields are stalking off to work grumbling over the coffee that puts little Cupid on crutches. The drip method that's all! True it's been known to coffee testers and connoisseurs for a long time that the drip or filtration method produced the clearest, most soul stirring of brows sparkling, fra grant, full bodied. But It just didn't get around, for mother had the percolator habit, and habits are hard to change, and grandma had grown accustomed to the old coffee pot with Its accumula tion of flavors aorta like your hus band's old pipe. The Little Filter Paper Simple enough this method boiling water poured quickly and but once over ground coffee. On its way it must pass through a .clean fresh filter paper, producing the clear amber liquid so characteristic of true drip coffee. Of course as with all methods you must carefully choose the pot. For there are drip coffee makers galore and with a great variety of differences in the material of both coffee pot and strainer. In the size of the coffee basket and In the num ber of holes In the basket. The Right Coffee As to the coffee itself merely grinding finer the coffee meant for a percolator or some method other than drip is not enough. It must be specially blended and specially roasted, so that the boiling water which passes through the coffee rapidly and only once will im mediately extract the rich fragrant coffee oils and none of the bitter woody taste ot the fibre. A perfect brew what length cof fee manufacturers do go to assure It! Coffee specially propared, a drip coffee maker perfect in design to ac company It, and flltor papers right in the can that's what one of them actually offers . . . you've no excuse now for not providing a Good Cupa Coffee! at some mining camp. His mother asks that anyone locating her son detain him and wire her. Description of the boy follows: Charles Is 14 years of age, about 4 feet, 8 Inches tan and weighs from 05 to 100 pounds. He has brown hair, hazel eyes, me dium complexion and is American born. He is also left-handed. ' When last seen he was wearing blue overalls, blue sweat shirt, black leather coat without fur collar, high top shoes. , He carried a tan boy scout canvas pack sack, Real estate or insurance Leave U to Jones. Phone 700. TO PORTLAND, April 5. (AP) The Southern Pacific Cascade and west coast trains will be consolidated out of Portland elective April 16, ac cording to revised schedules an nounced todny by J. A. Ormandy, passenger traffic manager. The $3 ex cess far now effective on the Cas cade will be eliminated. Tourist sleeping cars and coaches are to be added. The Cftscade will leave as at pres ent, at 0:50 p. m. It will arrive at Portland at 3:55 p. m. Instead of at 3:20 p. m. The West coast, now leaving Port land at B p. m. will be consolidat ed with the Cascade southbound between Portland and Dunsmulr. Northbound time West Coast will be unchanged except that It will reach Portland at 8:15 a. m. Instead of 7:35 a. m. The Klamath will be consolidated with the Cascade northbound be tween San Francisco and Portland. The Shasta, which was to have been discontinued, will be retained as a through train between Portland and San Francisco, operating over the Siskiyou line via Medford. South bound schedules will be cut 20 min utes. local maw Roclcructans of this community will be represented In their exten sion activities by Dr. O. R. Simp kins, of 542 South Ivy street. A cer tificate of appointment as represen tative was received by Dr. Slmpkins from the headquarters of the Boat cruclan Order In San Jose, Califor nia, today. "The duties of the representative nf t.hn Avtannlrtn Hnnrtmnnt ini va ried. They require the placing of paid advertisements In the various' newspapers of the community In con- I Junction with the national news-1 paper advertising campaign of the Roslcruclah Order," states Dr. 81m kins. "The representative of this or ganization donates .his services and receives no compensation, for the Roslcruclan Order is a fraternity de voted to the dissemination of knowl edge of the natural laws of life and the teachings of a philosophy. It Is neither a commercial nor a religious organization." Dr. Slmkins further states that the local representative la expected by sold in great volume at a very small per centage of profit. The Chesterfield trade-mark, as indicated above, is registered in the United States Patent Office. This means that the United Slates Government says that only Chester field may use this trade-mark for cigarettes. This is not only for our protection, hut for yours as well, because what the Chest the grand lodge of the order to urge all students and members In his community to attend the national conventions of the order which are held annually and w.hlch draw many hundreds from various countries. EASTER EXCURSION RATES OVER S. P. Announcemen of a four-day ser ies of dollar day excuslons over the Easter period, April 13 to 16, with roundtrlp fares cut to approximately one cent a mle, was made today by the Southern Pacific company. The special low-fare offering will provide for travel over the company's lines throughout the west, accord ing to locsl officials of the railroad. To give excursionists time for dis tant trips, a return limit of April 25 has been fixed, It was stated. Oregon Weather Pair tonight and Thursday but be- COmlntr OVerensfc nn rh ennnr.- n-nrm er interior tonight but frost east portion; cooler west portion Thurs day; moderate to fresh north and northwest winds offshore. Ringlette Permanent Ware . . If you set It here It illiiftt be good. 1933 prices TUCKEII'9 BEAUTY BOI.ONE Hotel Holland Bldg. Tel. 000 MAKE GARDENING A PLEASURE AND NOT A TASK Bee us for all sorts of Garden nose and Lawn Mowers Monarch Seed & Feed Co. "Everything for the garden but the rain" Cor. 6th and Bartlett. ' Phone 260 erfield trade-mark really means is that you and all Chesterfield smokers will get Chesterfields manufactured under the same formula, by the same people, and in all re spects absolutely the same, in every pack age you buy, year in and year out. Wherever you buy them, in this or in any other country, you can depend upon the Chesterfield trade-mark. BIRTHS Born to Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Braun of 721 Beekman street, this city, a daughter weighing 7' pounds, April 3. Fender and body repairing. Prices right. Brill Sheet Metal Works. 25 ounces for254 ECONOMICAL AND EFFICIENT U Dou ble Tested. f a Double Action BUY A NO. 119 Planet Jr. High-Wheel Cultivator Tools, 0 193). Liggitt Mriu Tobacco Co. el New Low Price A COME IN AND SEE IT TO-DAY r. John Cunp Furniture Store 335 East Main .... Phone 505 7f . lesterrie