MEDFOKD MUD TRTBUyE, MEDFOTfD, OREGON, MONDAY, MAY 23, 1S34.
PA"GE SEVEN
I
MOSCOW. (UP) Th Soviet gov
ernment baa started a campaign In a
sew salient In Its war against dis
ease. It Is directed against leprosy,
long the scourge of the Orient.
This attempt to stamp out an age
old plague la particularly Interesting
because of the modem, humanitarian
methods being employed and also be
cause of the new facts that are being
unearthed about the nature and con
tagiousness of leprosy.
While European Russia Is relatively
tree of leprosy, It Is a real health
nroblem In Turkmenistan, Uzbekls
jtn and certain other parts of the
T eastern domains of the Soviet Onion.
Naturally, It la In these regions that
the antl-leprosy campaign la being
pushed.
The leprosy section of the Moscow
Tropical Institute has charge of the
wori and la benefitting by the re
searches of Its best-known scientist,
Professor Kedrovsky. Among his out
standing discoveries and conclusions
are:
One. That the contagiousness of
leprosy la highly exaggerated. Ke
drovsky points out that doctors and
nursea who are In almost constant
'contact with lepers do not contract
the disease, provided they observe or
dinary rules of hygiene.
Two. A comfortable, healtful en
vironment la of the utmost Impor
tance In curing leprosy, which thrives
In dirt' and congestion.
Three. Kedrovsky has succeeded in
Isolating the culture of leprosy and
la conducting experiments on rabbits
- and mice, which he hopes will point
to new methods of curing the disease,
i Kedrovsky's second conclusion has
wen the basis of the Soviet antl
r lenrosv campaign in the Orient. The
old "ieprosonums." or "pest-nouses,"
were abolished. In their places were
established sanitariums, or "medlcal
, labor" colonies. The patients are
placed on a healthful diet, ore en
couraged to spend much time In the
open air and to do some useful work.
1
Rogue River
ROGUE RIVER, May 28. (Spl)
Rogue River school closed Tuesday,
ending a successful year. Thirteen
students graduated and the exercises
were enjoyed by those who attended
In the class were Wilbur Milton, Faye
Stuhl, John Palmer, Walter Rey
nolds, John Smith, Howard Baker,
Charles Hughbanks, Edward Hall,
Velma Smith, Alios MoLaren, Pearl
Moore, Virginia Hall and Delia Wit
son.
The dam which has been under
construction across Evans creek has
Y been completed and the water will
be turned into the ditches in about
two weeks. This furnishes water for
irrigation for all the farms under the
' old mill ditch.
A. V. Piatt of Corvallls spent a few
days visiting his daughter Miss Gene
vieve, who teaches here. After school
closed Mr. Piatt returnee', homo, ac
companied by her daugh'.r and Miss
Myrtle Willis, also a teacher going
borne for her vacation.
Dr. and Mrs. W. 8. Oary were also
passengers on the trip north and
Oary will make an extended visit,
Cary will make an extended visitor
but the dootor plans to return on
Monday. Mrs. Elizabeth rowler is at
tending the drug store during the
doctor's absence.
House on the W. H. Milton ranch
about three' miles out on the north
bank of Evans creek burned to the
ground about 10:30 p. m. Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawson, who were liv
ing there, lost nearly all of thetr
belongings, only a few things being
saved. The house was insured but
4V the furniture was a total loss. Mr.
Milton plans to rebuild.
Live Oak Grange enjoyed a good
meeting on Monday night with a
large attendance. The worthy lecturer
had arranged the program in two
parts, one for Mother's day, end the
other part for Memorial day and
many good readinga, duets, solos, and
songs msde the hour pass all too
quickly. The business meeting fol
lowed with the usual routine of dis
cussions and plans for better work
and Improvement. Live Oak Grange
will be represented with a float In
the Diamond Jubilee at Medford on
June 8 and the committee Is hard
at work to make it a credit to the
order. Next meeting will be held on
j June 4 at which time the committee
will serve rerfeShments, and on tlio
following meeting, June 18th, the
members will enjoy a pot-luck lunch
before grange at 7:00 o'clock.
Chas. Peterson, who has been min
I tag on Plessant creek the past montn.
wss a guest at the Waldorf hotel
for a few days and left Friday mora
1 ing for his home at Salem.
A Mrs. J. M. Whipple entertained with
4 dinner Sunday In honor of Mr.
Whipple's birthday, present were Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Scott and ohlldren.
Nell and Barbara. Mrs. M. R. Bllfs
and Mr. and Mrs. Whipple.
On the election board here were
3. T. Oalllgar, Harry White. Richard
Scott, Lora Carter and James Whip
ple. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dengler were
dinner guests Sunday at the A. A.
Mathes home In Grant Pass. The
dinner wss In honor of Mrs. Minerva
Dengler's birthday. Others who vis
ited Mrs. Dengler that day from
Rogue River were Mr. and Mrs. Or
vllle Dengler. Mrs. Richard Scott and
Mrs. Belle Hart and daughter lone.
Pour generations were presnt, Mrs.
Dengler and eon Fred, granddaughter
Mrs. Hart and great-granddaughter,
lone Hart.
Mr. and Mrs. John Breeding spent
a day last week on the Klsmath
river.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Roberts return
ed Sunday evening from Corvallls.
where they attended the state trac
meet. Robert Burdette received a rlo
knn and won fourth place In the
croad Jump.
Leonard Lund, who received back
Injuries while working In the CCC
on Eraru creek severs! months sga
left May 18 for Roseburg where he
entered the veterans' hospital for
treatment.
Ladles' Civle Improvement club and
mothers of the children entertained
the children of the grades Monday
with a picnic dinner In the park. This
la an annual event.
Little Martha Smith has been
spending several days visiting her
sister Mrs. Laura Laws of Centrsl
Point. Mr. and Mrs. Lawa brought
her home Friday and visited Mrs.
Effle Blackburn.
Eighth grade graduates went to
Ashland Friday, where they reoelved
their diplomas. They made the trip
In the aohool bus.
Captain Overmyer of Medford wes
In Rogue river two mornings last
week gathering up the school chll
dren who had to go to Medford to
have X-raya taken. There were those
who showed active cases of tubercu
losis when examinations were given
here recently.
CHEESE DISHES 10
BE SCHOOL
Cheese from, soup to mita Is the
order of the day tn present-day meal
planning. This oldest of all manu
factured foods, the American house
wife Is discovering, has an Infinite
variety of uses for every meal, and
every course In the meal.
Just how cheese and cheese dishes
can lend Interest and distinction to
present-day manus will be presented
before women at the Safeway Cook
ing School on Tuesday. From bacon
and cream cheese plnwheels, which
are the J oil lest sort of appetizer for
the dinner or buffet supper service,
to little cheese nuggets, confections
as good as gold, cheese of the fami
liar and popular varieties will be
shown in newest guise.
An entree which is perfect for the
family or "company" dinner made
with fricasseed chicken, spaghetti
and cheese la among the new dishes
to be presented. With salads, appe
tizer snacks, and even an Icing made
with "Philadelphia" cream cheese to
be demonstrated, cheese will justify
its place as a universal food, capable
of dramatizing the whole world of
foodstuffs. ,
Some new cheese recipes follow:
Broiled Bean Snacks
An excellent luncheon dish. Place
slice of buttered bread on baking
sheet or broiler pan. Spread with
baked beans. Put a slice of Ameri
can cheese over beans. Top with
slices of bacon, broil under low flame
until cheese Is melted and bacon
crisp, about 10 minutes.
Bacon and Cream Chwse
Plnwheels
An unusual hors d'oeuvre. Remove
the lower crust from a loaf of fresh
white bread. Cut thin siloes the full
length of the loaf. Trim orusts.
Spread each slice with cream cheese
softened with a small amount of
milk. Roll up like jelly roll, cut each
roll In half crosswise, and wrap a
strip ox bacon around each plnwheel.
securing It with two toothpicks,
Toast the plnwheels under a low
broiler flame, turning ofter to cook
the bacon. Or toast in a hot oven
until bacon Is crisp.
Cheese Nuggets
As good as gold. With a piece of
heavy thread, cut a cake of cream
cheese Into three lengthwise strips,
men into four crosswise pieces, mak
lng 12 small squares of cheese. With
a fork, carefully toss each square In
finely chopped nutmeats, until all
sides are covered. Or shake the
squares in a small paper bag half
filled with chopped nuts. Serve on
lettuce, with French dressing.
Sunbonnet Salad
Just the thing for the younger
generation I Invert half a large
canned pear on cup-shaped piece of
lettuce, having small end of paar on
stem end of lettuce. Pin lettuce to
pear on either side with cloves. Paint
face with vegetable coloring. Grate
American or plmlento cheese around
pear for golden locks. Use strips of
plmiento for bonnet strings.
"Goop"
All you need Is "more room."
3 to 8 pounds frlcasseelng
chicken
I veal knuckle
4 cups uncooked spaghetti,
i-i oup minced onion
1 teaspoon paprika
V4 cup minced green pepper
!4 cup minced plmlento
Vi cups ripe olives
2 cups grated cheese.
Cut chicken In pieces; clean and
brown In hot fat. Put In large kettle
and pour boiling water over It, Add
veal knuckle, and cook for 8 hours.
Take meat from broth, remove bones
and cut meat In small pieces; return
to broth, Brown paprika, onion and
green pepper in fat and add to the
mixture with plmlento. Add salt and
spaghetti and cook until spaghetti
is almost tender. Add olives and one
cup grated cheese and cook until
cheese Is melted into the mixture.
Serve piping hot on large platter,
sprinkle remaining cup of cheese
over top and decorate with strips of
pimento. Serve with platter salad
and putter garllo bread. Serves 10
hungry people.
Tomato Twinkle
The perfect salad for bridge
party.
1 can tomato soup
2 tablespoons gelatin
V4 cup water
i teaspoon salt
teaspoon onion juice
pound plmlento cbeess
1 cup mayonnaise
cup chopped celery
cup stuffed olives.
Heat soup and add gelatin which
has been soaked tn cold water. Add
salt, onion Juice and cheese, which
has been put through a sieve. Stir
until the mixture is smooth. Cool,
add mayonnaise and chopped celery.
Place sliced, stuffed olives around
bottom of ring mold. Pour in mixture
and chill until set. Serve with crab
salad or drained canned Royal Ann
cherries and pineapple, and crisp
crackers. Serves 10 to 13. .
Believe It or Not Icing
This Is marvelous!
1 package cream cheese
2 cups powdered sugar
; cup top milk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract.
Mash cheese and work in the
powdered sugar a little at a time.
Add vanilla, and milk, until of the
right consistency to spread.
Royal Neighbors of America will
give a dance and card party at the
K. P. hall Thurs. evening. May 31, d
mlselon 35c per couple. Extra ladles
10c. Good muAic
GATE CRASHING
seems to be reserved to Americans,'
according to trained observers. Lit
tle, if any. money is Involved. It ap
pears. The American "gate-crasher"
simply drives up to an unknown May-
fair door In a hired limousine and
with a million dollars' worth of nerve,
good looks and often borrowed even
ing gown and white fur, and an
nounces an unknown name to an un
known hostess. Nine times out of ten
she gets away with It.
.
LONDON (UP) London's chape
roned "gatecrashing" season Is open;
and so are the empty cash tills of
some of Britain's nobility.
From 830,000 to 8100,000 will crash
almost any gate In Britain . . . with
a chaperon, often the possessor of a
well known titled name. So well
known are some of the society women
here who will "Introduce" the debutante-daughters
of their wealthy
friends" that more often than not
the gates are crashed without the
knowledge of the hostess. In other
words, a great deal of the time dis
tinguished hostesses In London greet
newcomers into the Mayfalr set with
out in the least suspecting that the
blushing girl's father paid a fat sum
for the favor.
Chaperoned "gate-crashing," as dis
tinguished from common, garden va
riety of gate-crashing, Is an interna
tional method of operation. The dif
ference Is that in the former some
body pays a big fee and an enormous
expense account to have a perfectly
legitimate member of London society
introduce" them to unsuspecting
hostesses.
This type of "service" Is available
to anybody of any nationality, who
has enough money and desire to foot
the bill. The other kind of crashing
Forest Creek
FOREST CREEK, May 38. (Spl.)
Women's group had lunch with Mrs.
John Black on Thursday, May 24.
The afternoon waa spent cutting car
pet raga. Present were Mrs. Wulf,
Mrs. Charlie Madsen and daughter,
Alice; Mrs. Ivan Davles, Mrs. Jamea
Davtea, Mrs. Arthur Davies, Mrs.
Harry Ayres, Mrs. Aaron Ayrea, Miss
Amy Lynch and the hostess, Mrs.
Black.
The Forest creek school closed Msy
24.
Hazel and Susan Davtea returned,
May 28, from Wlmer, where the for
mer Is a teacher and the latter a
high achool student In Rogue River.
Those from here who attended the
Jacksonville high school commence
ment exercises Thursday were Alice
Madsen, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Davles
and Avadna Ayrea.
"Vie" Hartley, who formerly lived
on the headwaters of Foots Creek over
the ridge from here, Is visiting on
the creek with his wife and small
daughter.
Aaron "Junior" Ayres expects to re
turn to Central Point this week-end,
where he will be employed In the
Jones Grocery for the summer.
Isabell Black, who Is employed In
the home of Mrs. Tod Fish In Phoe
nix spent Saturday and Sunday with
her father, Lee Black.
Harry Ayrea left Sunday for the
Annie Springs CCC camp after a week
at home with hia family.
Logging operations on the Duggan
timber have been suspended until
abount June 1, the NKA cods quota
for May having been fulfilled.
Russell Ayres was a member of the
Jacksonville high school baseball team
which went to play Myrtle Creek team
May 25.
Mrs. James Davles accompanied
Mrs. Nettle Armprlest to Ashland to
the county eighth grade graduation
exercises.
There were no graduates from
Forest creek this year, as there la no
seventh or eighth grade In the achool.
Avanda Ayres was an overnight
guest of Burdette Dunnlngton In
Jacksonville May 24.
Miss Amy Lynch of Medford, who
has spent the past week with Mrs.
John Black, returned home Friday.
Among Saturday shoppers In Med
ford were Mrs. Chsrlle Madsen and
daughter, Alice, Mr. and Mra. Arthur
Davles, Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Davles.
Susan, Hazel and Mary Davlea, Mr.
and Mra. Paul Pearco and family.
Leneve Simpkins
Wins O.S.C. Award
OREGON STATE COLLEGE. Cor
vallls (Spl.) Leneve Simpkins of
Medford, freshman in secretarial sci
ence at Oregon State College, received
the Phi Chi Theta freshman award
at honor convocation during the re
cent women's week-end on the cam
pus. This award Is given each year to
the outstanding freshman woman In
secretarial science.
Miss Simpkins was slso pledged to
Alpha Lambda Delta, national scho
lastlo honor society for freshmen
women.
WINDOW GLASS We sell window
glass and will replace your broken
windows reasonably. Trowbridge Cab
inet Works.
All kinds of blanks for sale,
for rent, no hunting, no trespasalnf
and other cards for sale at Commercial
Printing Dept. of Mall Tribune.
CHARMING BREAKFAST TABLE ARRANGEMENT
This breakfast table setting, arranged by the Safeway Stores Homemakers' Bureau, show!
bow simplicity of arrangement, flowers and effeotive seleotion of china may combine to
make a happy beginning for the day.
CRACKE
RY gives you
one good surprise after another
QUICK-AND-EASIES
SOMETHING NEW
FOR YOUR SUNDAY
NIGHT SUPPER CROWD
tinchirvy Special
Blend anchovy paste with an equal
amount of batter. Spread on Toasted
Whole Wheat Dainties and garnish
with slice of staffed olive;
Springtime Snow Flakes
Cream butter with lemon Juice and
minced onion; Spread on Snow
Flakes and garnish with coarsely
chopped water cress;
Trick Treats
Mis 1 tablespoon horseradish with
2 tablespoons cream cheese. Spread
between Toasted Whole Wheat
Dainties.
Note; Prepare garnish ahead of time,
but spread on craeiert at the last
minute.
JCook
THIS SNOW FLAKE
SOUFFLE CALLS FOR
only 2 eggs
10 Snow Flake soda
wafers (crumbled fine;
1 oz. chocolate
1 cup milk
V4 cup sugar
12 tsp. cinnamon
1 tsp; vanilla
2 egg yolks
2 egg whites
Crumble crackers Into top of double boiler, add
chocolate, milk, sugar and cinnamon and cook
over hot water 10 minutes, stirring occasionally;
Remove from fire and add to beaten egg yolks;
Then fold in stiffly beaten egg whites and add
vanilla; Turn into buttered baking dish, set in a
pan of hot water and bake in moderate oven
(375 F.) 45 minutes. Serve at once with pepper
mint sauce or cream; Preparation, IS minutest
6 portions;
HONEY MAID MUFFINS
without using flour
18 Honey Maid Graham crackers (crumbled fine)
3 tbsps. melted shortening z cup milk
2 tsps. baking powder tsp. salt
A tbsps. honey 1 egg
Mix shortening and hooey and add well beaten
egg; Crumble crackers and add milk, salt and
baking powder; Put mixture into greased muffin
. pans ana bake in a hot oven (425 F.) 20 minutes;
12 small muffins;
Did you know that such easy-to-make good things
could come out of cracker packages? And there
are still more to come! For instance get a pack
age of Snow Flakes (the family-size carton is
thriftier) and see how many delicious recipes
there are, right on the package!
And try crisp Toasted "Whole Wheat Dainties...
plain, with cheese, or with salads. Or try giving
the children Honey Maid Grahams and milk when
they're hungry between meals. Lots of good
nourishment there!
Whether you use Honey Maids, Snow Flakes, or
Toasted Whole Wheat Dainties, plain or in cook
ery, you will find these crackers have perfect fla
vor. They're oven -fresh, always. Fast delivery serv
ice from nearby bakeries promises you that.
NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY
'' 'ii,.- -r- if' -T
x eft PvS4
if ft f
Look over your grocer's
biscuit department! See th
dozens of good things tin
Uneeda Bakers make that
are waiting you there-all
oven-fresh;