Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 28, 1933, Page 9, Image 9

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    METFOUD MAIL TRTBUOT:. JrET)FOin, OREGON. FRIDAY, APEIL 28, 1933.
PAGE NINE
JOHN U. W1LL1KE.
LONG A RESIDENT,
TAKEN BY DEATH
' John U. WMtke, resident of Med
ford for the past 37 years, and very
well known among the older rwldenu,
passed away "at his home. 618 East
Main street at 6:30 p. m. Thursday
ifter an Illness since last February.
His parents. Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Wllllke. emigrated from Germany to
Ohio in 1817, and Mr. Wllllke was
born at North Washington, Ohio.
January 20, X861.
' He was educated at Cessna and
Washington townships, and served his
apprenticeship with John Beach,
learning the carpenter trade. He fol
lowed this mode of endeavor moat of
his life. Ella O. Tripp waa united
In marriage to John O. Wllllke at
) Vancouver, Wash.. April 16. 1880. They
had Just celebrated their 44th wed
ding anniversary the 16th of this
month. To this union were born one
daughter and one son, Bessie and
Frank, the son having passed away
February 36, 1930.
Mr. Wllllke was a fin neighbor
and hla pleasing disposition and kind
words will be mtesed by hla. host of
friends. He especially waa fond of
children and young people.
He leaves his widow, Ella, one sls
v fcer, Mrs, Rosle Darr of Mendon, Mich.,
two brothers; Charles and Henry, of
Canton. Ohio; half-brothers, Nlcholus
of Ohio and William of Colorado.
Funeral services will be conducted
from the Perl Funeral home Sunday
at 2:00 p. m.. Rev. D. E. Millard of
ficiating. Interment will take place
In the Medford I. O. O. F. cemetery.
IN BRAYTON ESTATE
Leon B. Hasklns, Bert R. .Orr, and
J c. Thompson were today named ap-
i.... f th tat of the lata Wil
liam E. Brayton. orchardlat, who died
February 17. Tne last win ana -
mm MlKn filed. The bulk Of
the estate Is bequeathed to the
widow, wno la also namoa ocu,i
and consists chiefly of the Hollywood
orchard, between this city and Jacksonville.
KMED
Broadcast Schedule
Saturday
A. M.
8:00 Breakfast News, by Mall Trlbi
une.
, 8 :05r-Muslcal Clock. -
8:30 Shopping Guide.
9 :00 Frulendshlp Circle.
9 :30 Today.
9:45 Shoppers' Tour.
10:00 U. 8. Weather Forecast.
10:00 Schubert's Love Songs.
10:30 Morning Comments.
10:43 Morning Melody.
11:00 Neapolitan Nights.
11:15 Martial Music.
11:30 Song and Comedy.
12:00 When It's Sprlngtlm in the
Rockies,
p. M.
12:15 Pyroll Parade.
12:30 News Flashes by Mall Tribune.
12:30 Lumberpacks.
1:00 patriotic Program.
1:15 Varieties.
1:30 Grant Pass Hour.
1 :45 Interlude.
2:00 Dance Matinee.
. 3 :00 Songs 'for Everyday.
3:30 KMED Program Review.
8:35 Music of Old.
8:45 Slesat Hour.
4:00 Across the Seas to Hawaii.
4 :30 Masterwnrks.
6:00 Popular Parade.
8:45 News Digest by Mall Tribune.
6:00 Medford Theater Guide.
6:05 Andy Slough.
6:30 Dinner Dance Music.
7:00 vignettes.
7:30 Eventide.
8:00 U. 8. Frost Forecast.
Notice of Flml Account.
In the County Court of the State of
Oregon for tne county oi
In the Matter of the Estate of Bertha
McCarter, deceased
Un!ju I- haha oVTt th&t the Utl
derstj-ned, as Administratrix of the
Estafe of Bertha MCarter, deceased.
has filed her final account in m
County Court of the State of Ore
gon, for Jackson County, and that
Thursday. June 1st. 1933, at the hour
and the court room of said Court
has been appointed ry al court as
the time and place for hearln; ob
jections thereto, and the settlement
thereof.
Dated and first picjUshed April 28.
1933 Date of lat publication. May
19 1933. v
'.TOA MoCARTER. Administratrix.
ROBERT J. CREAMER.
512 Falling B'.dg..
v romana, ureun.
Attorney for Administratrix.
Final Votlre.
In the County Court of the State of
orison in ana ior tne wjuuvj u
Jackson.
In the Matter of the Estate of Alia
R. Phlpps, deceased.
Notice is hereby ylven that the
jndrslmed tiecuto-a of the estate
of Alia" R. Phlpps. deceased, have
tiled their final report in the above
matrer. and that the Judie of said
httir nf ten
o'clo-k n m. on the 27th day of
May. 1933. as the time, and tie
Courtroom of said Court, in the
Courthouse at Medford. Oreeon. as
the place for hearing objections. If
anv there ne. to tne saia ima,
port the cloning of ald estate, and
the r.Icharsinjr of ld executors of
'.l further duty, responsibility or Ha
h'lltv In connection therewith, and
all persons interested in said estate
time and place and show cause. If
any rney have, wny sucn rcuei
not oe granted.
Daed and f!r."t published this 28th
day of April. 1933
PRESTON PHIPPS.
LEE PHIPPS.
Exe-Titor.i with the Will snn?d o'
the estate of Aiie a. Phlppa, deceased.
Proper Food Important
Factor in Child Health
Bt the Bureau of Home Economic, i
U. S. Department of Agriculture.
Each year of the depression haa i
emphasized the Importance of our
new kind of May Day. now set apart
by presidential proclamation as Child
Health Day. Many people believe
that by constantly calling attention
to child health, through this and
other means, the government has pre
vented some of the worst pf the per
manent harm tne depression might 1
otherwise have caused. Never before i
was the community so conscious of
the needs of children. It knows that
the undernourished child Is more
likely to become the victim of tuber
culosis, and Is more susceptible to
other Infections, both In childhood
and later years. It realises that mal
nutrition which causes rickets, may
handicap a child for life. Lack of
food or the wrong kind of food brings
lasting Ills to the community, as well
as to the child and the family. There
Is a new appreciation of these vital
facta.
So the child's food nowadays is
everybody's concern. Parente must
see to It and the community must
not neglect It; for upon the child's
food and other controllable conditions
of his life very largely depends hla
health. Public welfare organizations,
local, state and national governments,
are all devoting special efforts to the
factors that make for the health of
children. -
The bureau of home economics of
the U. S. department of agriculture
makes special studies of food for
children. Particularly In these recent
years. It works with relief agencies
to spread Information about the spec
ial needs of children and the way
to protect child health when food
supplies are low. Now, more than
ever, "Children first," should be the
slogan where there Is not enough
food to go round.
The child's diet under any circum
stances, according to the child health
specialists, must Include milk and
should Include cod-Uver oil. At the
very least, a pint of milk a day,
preferably a pint and a half to "
quart. If the child Is less than two
years old, he needs 3 teaspoonfuls of
cod-liver oil each day (he ought to
have 4) to make sure he la protected
against rickets.
He needs other foods, too orange
Juice or tomato Juice and a vegetable
or fruit every day (3 or 4 if possible
are advised) with plenty of bread
and cereals. Next best to milk, eggs
are one of the foods all children
should have. In fact, eggs contain
some food substances that milk does
not contain In any appreciably quan
tity ( such aa Iron and vitamin D)
and therefore are an excellent sup
plement to milk. Meat at least twice
a week adds to the iron and effective
protein In the child's diet.
Almost as Important to the child
as milk and cod-liver oil la sunshine
out-door sunshine. In summer.
many children can get sunshine who
cannot get the best food. Sunshine
does not take the place of milk, or
other ordinary food, but It does help
the child to grow and develop good
bones. The sunlight on the child's
bare skin produces In his body one
of the same vitamins vitamin D
that he' gets In cod-liver oil and
in egg yolk. This vitamin, along with
milk, keeps the child from develop
lng rickets. Or If he haa rickets,
It will help to cure him of that
disease.
For children, as for adults, a care
fully selected variety of food Is nec
essary for an adequate diet. Even
the baby should have some variety,
for with variety come vitamins, espec
ially In the tomato Juice or orange
Juice prescribed for him every day.
Very soon he should have cereals, egg
yolk, and greens. MUk soups, with
finely chopped vegetables In the milk,
also give variety to the small child's
diet. Custards, puddings, fruit whips.
and such desserts, are highly nutri
tious.
Except that the form is usually dif
ferent for the very young child, the
same kinds of food may well be pro
vided for the whole family. This la
one way to relieve the busy mother
the serving of the same meal for
parents and children. The little tot
will not eat as much as the six-year-
old, and the six-year-old will not
have the big appetite that usually
characterizes the boy of 10 or 13. But
each and all of them should have
milk and vegetables and fruits, egga
as often as Income allows, and cer
eals, meats, fish. Cottage cheese and
the cream cheeses are good, and liver
Is one of the best of meats for chil
dren. Fortunately, too, the cheap
kinds of liver are practically aa nutri
tious as the expensive kinds, and
when cooked are quite as attractive.
LOW-COST MENU FOB ONE DAY.
Breakfast.
Hot Cereal Top MUk
Tomato Juice for youngest child
. Toast
Coffee (adults) . Milk (children)
Dinner.
Liver and Bacon
Mashed Potatoes and Milk Gravy
Green Beans
Chocolate or Cocoa Cornstarch
Pudding.
Supper.
Shoestring Carrots In MUk
Buttered Toast
Canned Fruit or Stewed Dried
Apricots.
Milk for All.
E
ON FEE PAYMENT
(Continued from Page One.)
press dispatches, left her fur coat on
the train and It waa recovered by a
deputy aherlff.
Visitors Barred
Judge Skip worth, immediately fol
lowing the incarceration. Issued n
order prohibiting visitors or Inter
views to the couple In their cells.
The transfer of the Banks from
the county Jail to the scene of their
trial was accomplished with speed
and secrecy, and the switch to the
train was not generally known. The
move from the county Jail waa on
short notice. It was first reported
that the accused pair would leave
Sunday morning.
No official announcement haa been
made by counsel for Banks as to what
defense will be employed. Attorneys
generally believe It will be self-defense
with an Insanity defense Inter
posed, Hint have been broadcast
that the defense will attempt to
prove by witnesses that the slain of
ficer made threat against Bank.
To controvert this testimony, the
state will procure written words of
Banks wherein he made threats
against officers and that he had pub
lished threats to kill Deputy Sheriff
Phil Lowd If he Yr tried "to take
him from hla home on, a warrant.
Lowd testified to this effect at the
Sheriff Schermerhorn ouster proceed
ings. The state will also introduce
stenographic reports of Banks' "Con
gress" speeches, including hla revolu
tion praclamatlon from the court
house steps, to show that he waa de
fiant of constituted authority and
at the time of the murder facing 35
civil and legal proceedings.
Profound Egotist
To controvert an Insanity plea, the
state will produce evidence that
Banks was "a profound egotist, given
to homicidal boast and threats";
that he waa rational before, during
and after the staying; that he knew,
and now knows, the difference be
' j'een right tnd wrong, within the
legal meaning of Insanity, and that
practically up to time of the firing
of the fatal shot transacted business
matters.
The trial Is not expected to last
more than next week. The testimony
will be largely confined to the tragic
events of Maroh IS. The state will
also show malice and premeditation,
including plans for flight after the
killing.
FOR SALE
Furnishings and Lease of
a 42-room Hotel. Best
location in city. -
Box 5, Ashland, Ore.
h
RECIPES.
Liver and Bacon.
Va pound sliced bacon
1 pound sllved liver
Salt
Pepper
Flour
Parsley.
Cook the bacon slowly In a skillet.
As soon as It Is delicately browned
and crisp, drain on paper, and keep
warm. Wipe the liver, and if it la
hog or lamb liver scald for a few
minutes In hot water. Beef and calf
liver does not need scalding. Sprinkle
the pieves of liver with salt and pep
per, dip in flour, and cook In the
bacon fat at moderate heat until the
liver la lightly browned. Serve sur
rounded by the crisp bacon on a hot
platter and garnish with parsley. If
gravy Is desired, reserve a tablespoons
of the fat, add 2 tablespoons of flour,
and 1 cups of milk or cold water,
and stir constantly until thickened.
Season with salt, pepper, and a little
minced onion. Serve hot with the
liver and bacon.
Shoestring Carrots In MUk.
Wash and scrape young carrots, cut
In slices lengthwise, and then Into
narrow stripe. If the carrots are
large ones, cut the strips In half.
Heat milk to boiling and add the car
rota and salt. Simmer for about 10
minutes or until tender. Add but.
ter or other fat and serve with the
milk as sauce. Thickening may be
added, if desired.
Creamy Rice With Apricots.
cup rice
1 cup boiling water
1 cups milk
l teaspoon salt
cup sugar
a cups chopped fresh fruit or dried
fruit soaked and cooked.
Cook the rice over direct heat In
the cup of bolting water. When the
water has been almost absorbed put
the rice In a double boiler, add the
milk, salt and sugar. Cover and cook
until the rloe Is tender. Mix the
rice and fruit and when chilled serve
with top milk. Canned grated pine
apple gives an excellent flavor.
I
.
jI7JAV It:
I OW you can enjoy
the best coffee money can
buy with the assurance
that it is absolutely fresh.
Our plan of scheduled
delivery to the stores . . .
smaller but adequate
stocks quickly sold . : .
makes this possible.
Nob Hill Coffee, a blend
of the finest Central and
South American coffees,
;s sold at an economical
price because it is packed
in the modern, glassine
lined flavor-protected
package.
Enjoy the best! Save the
most! Use top-quality
Nob Hill Coffee!
DWIGHT EDTARDS COMPANY
Sea FrttKitco Lot Aifi
Pont anal Dr
Featured In ?afeway and Fay'n Taklt Stores.
ym Rw
ooim
PAY - LESS HDRUlSS
NONE SOLD TO DEALERS. QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
Quality Drugs
For Less!
CJL I HI
Buy Saturday!
16c Stork Castile
Baby Soap 3 for
25
26c Johnson's
Baby Talc ......
14
50o Ipana
Tooth Paste
27
50o Phillips'
Milk of Magnesia
29-
$1.20 Sal Eepatica C Q
Saline Salts .Qv1
50o Lysol 0Q
Disinfectant
75o Ben Gay
Analgesique
39
$1.50 Pinkham's QQf
Vegetable Compound VU
40c lb. Hospital 0 1 C
Absorbent Cotton m I
$1.25 lb. Agar Agar CQ,
Uncut No. 1 Kobe U U1
Hill's Nose Drops 0 Q r
Eperdine Compound sfaO
BOo Luxor Rouges.
All popular shades ,
39
50c Luxor face Powder.
Powder Pencil free .
39
75c Vaseline
Hair Tonio .
59.
35o Ingram's
Shaving Oreara
19.
75c Bayer Pure 6-grain
Aspirin; 100 for
49
$1.00 Ovaltine.
A tonio drink
59
BOo Armand's
Face Powders
26
85o qt. Heavy Russian
Mineral Oil
49
$1.00' Vacuum Bottle. Keeps
your drink hot or cold
53
35c Oorega False
Tooth Powder
19-
BOo Prophylactio
Tooth Brushes ....
31
BOY SCOUTS, Get Your Official
First Aid Kit $1.00 Value
79
We Carry a Complete Line of the Famous
Max Factor Products at Cut Prices
70c Palm Olive
Shaving Kits
39
Kotex Sanitary Pads.
2 for
-25
Camel Cigarettes, Carton . . . . . 97c
PAY - LESS HDIMJGS
33 North Central
We Are Never Undersold
Star Meat Market
314 East Main
FREE DELIVERY
Phone 373
Fig Bars
Per lb.
10c
Fresh Bread
Per loaf
5c
R. I. Red Hens, lb 18c
Beef Stew, lb 6c
Beef Pot Roast, lb 8c
Shortening, 4 lbs. ....... 25c
Fresh Side Pork, lb. .... . 10c
Picnic Shoulders, lb 10c
Home Rendered Lard,
3 lbs. ... t 25c
A Complete Line of Lunch Meats
and Cheese
4
SATURDAY
and
MONDAY
SPECIALS
HI
BUY AND SAVE NOW!
Basic Food Prices are going up. You will be wise, to make
your purchases soon of a quantity of foods, from the
Protector of Your Purse Safeway.
PORK and BEANS
Ritter's Quality
Dozen 55 16 01 can
SUGAR
Pure Cane
Fine GrnnulatPd
8 lbs
43.
BUTTER
ftafeway Quality
Fancy Creamery
Lb.
28.
ANGEL FOOD CAKES 0 n
The Famous Betty Crooker 13-Egg Cake, Full JJ M (
Size. Finest ingredients. Each "
SHRIMP
AMERICAN BEAUTY
Fancy Pack Saa
3 cans
FLOUR
SAFEWAY
. All PnrpoM ,1 j .
Hardwheat VI 14
49 lb. bag
RAISINS
Fancy Seedless
3 lbs.
14c
CHICKEN FRYERS
With a S1.00 purchaae of loodi.
For limited time n- offer th
htavy Cast Aluminum Chicken
Fryer, with corer. for our ous
tomers.
Each
BEANS
Recleaned SmaU
niiltea
4 lbs.
SARDINES
North Star Smatl
Flah In Olive OU
2 can
$.09
15
15c
COFFEE
NOB HILL
The Beat
rtZZLE FRF.K
Lb. pkg,
JELL WELL
In the new
Improved Form
All flarors Pkg,
COCOA
Baker1--tha
children's
food drink
Yi lb. can
CAKE FLOUR
Airy Fairy
Approved by Good
Housekeeping
Lg. pkg.
28.
10
I ': : : i
20.
FISHERMEN!
Flay Safe, Stook up at Safeway
With Good Foods at a Saving
COFFEE
Maxwell Houte ,
Vita Fresh
Lb. can
CLORAX
Washlnf Fluid
Quart bottle
SOAP
Luna for Easier
Laundering
12 bars
WALNUTS
Oregon grown
Soft Shells
Lb.
29.
15c
25c
15c
CHOCOLATE
Baker's Premium
Top the cake with
chocolate
Vi lb. cake
SYRUP
Kara Blue Label
10 lb. pail
22
55c
SNOW FLAKES
15c
Fresh Salted
Crackers
Lb. pkg.
PANCAKES
Mex-l-mum
Kxtra quality
VA lb. pkg.
15
.The Best Produce From The
Largest Markets Are Yours at Safeway
asparagus I NEW PEAS
Tender, local grown
Lb.
LETTUCE
Large crisp heads
Eaoh
5
5.
WeU nued Pode
3 lbs.
ORANGES
SIS size, sweet, full
of Juice.
Doi.
13
14
YOU BENEFIT BY SAFEWAY POLICY I
DISTRIBUTION WITHOUT WASTE 1
BUY YOUR MEATS AT SAFEWAY
AT A SAVING
1 933 Legs Lamb m. 17c
Bacon
Lard
Morrell'i
Sugar Cured
1 4720
Pure
Home Rendered
Sliced Ham
Center
Cuts
3 ib. 23
each 5
Pork Chops
each 2
Beefsteak o ib;l2v&e
RlD
Fancy Large
.Dills
2 for 5c
Pickled
Pig Feet
Lb. IQc
Delicioui
Weiners
Lb. 122C
Main and Holly.
TWO STORES 33 No. Central