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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 1, 1935)
I MEDFORD MATT. TTCTBTJXTC. MEDFORD. OREGON. WEDNESDAY. MAY 1. 1035. PAGE THREE Society and Clubs Madame Craft and Pierre HustettM at Bridge Luncheon Twenty-two wives of officers of the Med ford district, civilian conserva tion crops, were entertained at a de lightful bridce iuncheon today, given at The Colonial. Mra. Roy D. Craft and Mrs. chauncey L. Pierce acted at hostesses. Those present were, beside the hostoftrs: Mrs. Clare H. Armstrong. Mrs. M. Milton Potter, Mra. Ernent W. Onihn, Mra. Francis K. Smith. Mra. John P. Merrill. Mra. John It- Murray, Mrs. HJalmer T. Gentle, Mm. Robert S. Bower. Mrs. Claire D. Wal lace. Mrs. D. E. Wledman, Mra. Henry R. Barrls. Mrs. Leonard L. Lamb. Mra. Glenn J. Key. Mr. Theodora P. Coates, Mra. Charles H. Jeffreas. Mra. William B. Close, Mrs. Herman J. Melrln. Mra. William C. Ryan, Mra Fred W. Greene, Mra. Albert T. An derson, Mrs. George Woodal and Mrs. Guy W. Saunders. Ml. Anne Livingston Will lie Hostess at Tea. Miss Anne Livingston will be hostess Thursday at an afternoon tea sponsored by the Garden club of St. Mark's Episcopal church. A silver offering will ba taken during the afternoon to defray expenses of beautifying the grounds of St. Mark's church. South side Circle To Meet with Mrs. Coe T.ie South Side Circle of the Bap tist church will meet at the home of Mrs. m. E. Coe. 67 West Eighth street Thursday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock, according to an announcement Issued today. Round Ifohlti Club Enjoys I.awn Tarty, Round Robin club enjoyed & lawn party at the Wyn Arnold home Sun day. Invited guests were Miss Tes- ale O'Connor, and Mrs. Wm. Stolley and children, Junior and Donna. The afternoon wag spent In games, stunta and a "foot race," won by Myrtle Arnold, and much enjoyed by all. Rnva! Neighbor Will Have Business Meet Thursday. Roval Neighbors will hold a bust ness meeting Thursday evening the K. P. hall, for the transaction of Important matters. All members are urged to be present. Mrs. Charlet McKea Given Birthday shower. A group of friends and relatives greeted Mrs. Charles McKee Satur day with a "happy birthday" shower. A larce birthday cake adorned the ) long table which waa spread In honor of the occaalon. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Charles McKee and daughter. Mar Jorie. Rev. E. N. Long and little daughter, Jean. Mra. Schafer. Mrs. R. I. Gan field and daughters, Isa bel and Barbara Ann. Mr. and Mrs. By num. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ayres and three children. Vera, Cheater and Shirley, Mra. Archie Embree and three children. Ray, Glen and Ethel, Arthur Ayres. MIm Lo Ella Terwllllger and the host and hostess. Mr. and Mrs. Ayres. Indies of St. Mark's Church To Serve Luncheon Ladles of St. Mark's church will eerve a cafeteria luncheon Friday at one o clock at the parish hall, to which all lad lea who are interested in the church are Invited. Those In charge will be Mrs. M. M. Herman. Mrs. L. d. Taylor and Mra, L. Paxson. The luncheon will be followed by a business- meeting. ftuests at Klme Home Return Home to Oakland Mr. and Mra. Neville Stlne and Mr and Mra. Ralley Turner and baby daughter, who have been house guests of Mr, and Mra. Nick Klme the past several days, returned to their home in Oakland. Cal yesterday by motor. Mrs. Stlne la a slater and Mrs. Turner a niece of Mrs. Klme, Mrs. Minnie Bryant Will Entertan Circle The East Side Penny Circle will meet at the home of Mra. Minnie Bryant. 101 Cottage street Tuesday afternoon. May 3. All ladlea attending the Baptist church living on the Eaat Side, are urged to be present. Bible study will be the 18th chapter of Acta. Decree of Honor Meeting Thursday. The monthly business meeting ol the Degree of Honor will be held Thursday. All members are requested to be present promptly at 7 :30 aa there Is much business to be taken up. Pythian Sisters of District In Convention Here Saturday E OF OREGON WILL SPEAK; Medford physicians will make pub lic a statement each day for a week, beginning today. It was announced by officials of the Jackson County Health association, in the observance of Child Health Week and In an ef fort to strengthen Immunization acalnst diphtheria. The first state ment, from Charles T. Sweeney, M. D follows: - "Much has been said about the past 50 years being the 'Golden Per iod' of medicine, but the greatest single achievement which has brought this about and which has saved the Uvea of not hundreds but thousands of our children and youth, has been the progress that has been made in the Immunization against disease. "Epidemics with high mortality rates are practically unknown and Immunization for almost every com municable disease Is now available for everyone." EXCURSION PLANE Night and day excursion flights over the city which are being feat ured at the municipal airport with a giant Ford tri-motor ship have met with auch popularity, according to those In charge, that the plane has been held over and will operate Thursday as well. The flights are be ing made from 3:00 to 10 p. m. at a small fee, and are 16 miles in duration. In addition to the pilots, the big $50,000 ship carries 11 passengers. Those who made the excursions yes terday and last night expressed won der at the comfort of flying In the big air-liner and said at night the city was a spectacular sight. The ship waa brought here by Western Airplane Distributors with headquarters at Kansas City. Mo., on a tour made with the purpose of arousing a deeper Interest In air transportation. Members of the Pythian Sisters will gather at the K. P. hall In Medford Saturday at 1:30 o'clock for the 13th annual convention of District No. 4, over which Adelaide Swartz, district deputy grand chief, of Medford, will preside. Other district officers will be: Neva Wimer, senior. Thermopylae temple. Grants Pas: Gertrude Jane, junior. Umpqua, temple, Rose burg; Anna Jacqua, manager. Talisman temple. Medford; Lillian Moffatt. secretary. Talisman temple, Medford: Fae Mc Queen, treasurer, Thermopylae tem ple, Grants Pass; Elsie Rasmuasen. guard, Pacific temple, Bandon; Austin Barneburg, protector. Talisman tem ple, Medford. Pythian Sisters from Bandon, Roseburg, Ashland and Grants Pass, with their representa tives, will be in attendance. Barbara Graves, grand chief of Ore gon Pythian Sisters, and other grand officers will address the conclave. Convention will be called to order at 1:30 p. m. by District Deputy Grand Chief Adelaide Swarte. The usual convention work will be exem plified and the quest lonaon law and order answered by the grand officers. Election of officers for the 1936 convention and other matters of im portance to the order will occupy the time until 4:30 p. m., at which time the convention will adjourn until 8 o'clock. A banquet will be served Pythian Sisters and husbands at 6:30 o'clock In the Lutheran church on Fourth street. At 8 o'clock the meeting will again be called to order. The following program will be presented: Three numbers by Ruth Luy'a dancing girls; violin solo, by R. Cooke: musical skit and songs, by Mrs. McCorkie'a "Men yenetta" of Weed, Cal.; reading from Umpqua temple of Roseburg: songs by Mrs. McCorkle; dance by Clyde Flehtner. After the conclusion of the program convention work will be resumed to continue until 11 p. m., after which dancing and refreshments will be en Joyed. Mra. J. B. Yarbrough and her com mittee will have charge of the re freshments, Mrs. Thomas Judge and Mrs. W. F. Walden will be in charge of the flow ers and decorating. All Pythian Sisters who may be visiting In the city are most welcome to attend. LITTLElClAVELS ALONE FROM RUSSIA j tisJ I ; run Traders arriving at Unalaska re ported volcanoes on Islands to the west have been unusually active In recent month. TORONTO. Ont. (UP) After trav eling from Moscow, U. fit. S. R., to Toronto by .herself, Glena Gregerleff. nine, la preparing to resume her Ca nadian education where It was dis continued In October, 1032. Accompanying her mother and father, the latter an engineer, Glena traveled with them to Moscow and later to Minsk. Her mother died last year and the child was sent here by her father. She will live with her grandmother. She speaks English. . Russian and German. Reception Friday For Presbyterians Who Joined Lately The twenty-six new members re ceived into fellowship of the Presby terian church during the fiftieth an niversary observance are to be guests of honor at an Informal reception in the church parlors Friday at eight p. m. The Women's association of which Mrs. Arch Work la general chairman has charge of the reception with Mra. Verl Walker and Mrs. W. E. Tumy In charge of the program. Plans are being made to make the evening an all-church "set-together" with social hour and a program of music and readings. Every member and friend of the church la urged to be present. When members of P.vthlnn Slaters meet at the K. V. hall Nut unlay, these four grand officers will make the principal addresses. They are: I'pper left. Harhnra Ornves. grand thief of Pythian Sisters of Oregon: left, Ella G. Wort man, past grant! rhlef of Ore gon and delegnte last enr to the Su preme Temple nt Chicago; upper right, Mabel A. Koherts of Ashland, also past grand t hief of Oregon, and above. Adelaide Swartz, district dep uty grand rhlef of District No. 4, Medford, who will preside. SPRING FESTIVITY Tonight wilt see the formal open ing of the spring social season in Medford with the May Day dance to be held at the Oriental Gardens. Plans for the big dance were com pleted last nuht at the regular week ly meeting of the Active club, spon sors of the affair, and indications are for a gala crowd. Archie Leu and his famous record ing orchestra, always a favorite with Medford dance enthusiast, has been retained. Ticket sale have been ad vancing briskly, and many early theater parties will end up at the dance. Outside activities, such as the auto show, planned In conjunction with the dance, have been canceled because of inclement weather, but the remainder of the plans are gotrts: through aa scheduled. Members of the general committor, headed by Jack Butler, and including John Ntedermeyer, Harold Larsen, Earl 81 mm a and Dr. Dwtflht Flnaley have reported that the hall will be attractively decorated, and the or chestra platform will be decked In appropriate spring flowers. The committee for the evening will be composed of Carl Johnson, secre tary of the Active club. Chet Hub bard, Glen Faorirk, Kenneth Ander son. Jimmy Moore, BUI Heath and Harry Eldon. All of the proceeds from the affair will be devoted to sending a Medford Boy Scout to the National Jamboree in Washington. D. C. in August, in keeping with the Actlvian motto of being first in clvc service. The May Day Pesta, Inaugurate, this year, will be on annual affair, and interest already manifested shov -that the occasion will take Its place aa one of the outstanding socin. event of each year in this community. nights after 13 o'clock and the I Dreamland management hopes to keep the dancers In Medford and eliminate the traffic hazard that has existed. Al Stewart has organized a 10-plece dance band which will play at Dream land every Saturday night and aUo on Wednesday nights starting next week. Al Stewart says he ha secured every good dance musician available In southern Oregon and he haa been rehearsing them nightly for the open ing dance. He is arranging many new and special numbers for Saturday night. Y OF Many members of the Jackson County Cha.nber of Commerce have signified their intention of attending the chicken dinner at the Egle Point grange tomorrow night It was an nounced this morning. The dinner la scheduled to mart promptly at seven o'clock. Vice President H. A. Thierolf will In all probability head the Medford delegation and all members who plsn to attend are asked to De at the grange hall by seven o'clock. Men In Medford CCC district are going to sleep warm and comfortable thla year, even in the camps that are situated in the highest and moat wind-swept mountains. Deliveries are being made this week of mattresses, new blankets, sheeta and pillow cases for every man In the district, and broad smiles Indicate that the new "kivers" are going over great. It will take nine boxcars to bring the equipment Into the district and nine truckloads to distribute It among the camps. The new sheeta and pil low cases, which will be laundered regularly, will replace scratchy regula tion army blankets, and the mat tresses will replace straw-filed ticks. f Be correctly corseted in an Artist Model by Ethel wyn B Hoffmann The cup that cheers! & Any tine tea encers ana stimulates, but Schilling Tea "cheers" right out loud 'Jy it's so full of flavor. .. It has more flavor pj ( because it s toasted. Schilling Toasted lea Oregon Weather Generally fair tonight and Thurs day, but occasional cloudiness west portion; local frost for east portion tonight; moderate, changeable wind off the coast. While the number of passengers carried by American airlines de creased in the last year, the number of passenger-miles increased Congressman Stephen M. Voung of Ohio haa a son. Stephen. Jr., IX who la stationed at Norfolk. Va., an enlisted man In the navy. April Frolic Of Jackson P. 7 A. Termed Success Dancing Until Two At Dreamland Hall Workmen are busy installing a loud speaker aystem and getting Dreamland hall ready for the opening dance Saturday night, where dancing will continue until two a. m. under the new ordinance recently passed by the city council. During the patt there have been several very bad ac cidents on country roada Saturday Another April Frolic for Jackson school passed last Friday night. Suc cessful In many ways, first from the standpoint of good fellowship, which was evidenced by every one attend ing: second, co-operation of all the P.-T. A. membership, and th!l. good management on the part of all com mittees, as is shown by the net profit of $107. Much of the success waa due to Mrs. F. C. Dlllard. general chairman. The Jackson P.-T. A. wish to espec ially thank Washington school for their suggestions and help, also for their donations, and also the follow ing business firms for donations: Both Safeway Stores, the Plggly Wiggly, Boyd's Market, the Oroce tcrias, Swem's, The Mail Tribune and Job department, and the Chamber of Commerce broadcast. Mrs. Dillard wishes to thank all committee chairmen for their hard work and the P.-T. A. membership for their loyal support. your Phone 643 We'll haul away refuse City Sanitary Service A new taste thrill. Beck's Prune Flaked Wheat Bread, was ptaced on sole at food stores today by Beck's 1 Bakeries, according to Michael Beck j Mr. Beck .says, "wc have been working ; for weeks on this new loaf which is j entirely different from any bread ever introduced here. Thla perfected , brend conforms In quality with all J other products of Beck's Bakeries and j it is receiving the approval of th ! most critical experts." The Orezon prunes in the brean : gives It a delicious flavor and makes : It condxiclve to proper and regula elimination. No drufes of any kinri have been added. The flaked wneat gives the lof a flaky flavor fount In no other bread. Beck's guarante that toasted Prune Flaked Whe"' Brend will give any breakfast new in erest. Mr. Berk says the new brear? appeal to every member of the fam ily end children esepeclally like the new prune flavor. HAZARDVILLE. Conn. (UP) lr. 1855. the year that Grover Cleveland , was i no u sunned president, Mrs ; Sarah Reynolds "Aunt Sarah." not, to almost everyone hereabouts be zan p laving the organ at St. Mary's Ep:.copal church. This year marks her 50th anni versary as church organist. di. NU.-y's ha replaced Its organ four time. during that period. Mrs. Reynold now is 73. NOW... Easy to Add SILVERWARE Get sets of long life sil verware teaspoons, servers, forks. In trade for Roman Meal pack ni' fronts. Easy to obtain. No saving for months. See your grocer for details and pictures of beautiful sets avail able In this time-limited opportunity. Or write Roman Meal Co. Taeo ma. Wash Konun Meal Is rich in Vitamin B. so essential to good health. Not Just for porridge but for use in breads, muffins. waffTs rools. tc For Weeks We have been working on an entirely new loaf of bread which will meet with the approval of the most critical bread expert. At last, we have perfected this new loaf, which conforms in qual ity with all other products of Beck's Bakeries We give to you, with no increase in price, Another Big Elks' Dance SAT. NITE MAY 4th, ELKS TEMPLE For Elks and Their Invited Out-of-Town House Quests Don't Miss Itl $1.00 Admission. GOOD MUSIC . Stan Sherwood, Chairman 99 Its the Water FROM OUR SUBTERRANEAN SPRINGS that improves every process of brewing BECK 'S PRUNE FvS BREAD A Natural Laxative QC Sliced and Attractively Wrapped In Cellophane Conducive to proper and regular elimination; no drug, whataoever, added. You'll like its delicious flavor and its flaky quality. And if you are tired of plain, stewed prunes for breakfast, try this new bread, toasted or plain. Serve it also for lunch and dinner. It is delicious with butter. We are proud to offer this new loaf to every member of your family. You will find it on your grocer's shelf today. Look for the Orange Label BECK'S BAKERIES MEDF0BD KLAMATH FALLS For Sale by All Good Dealers t." . 7 V 4h Wrttov EVERY process of brewing is improved by the waters from our subterranean spring of Turn water, used exclusively in the manufacture of Olympia Beer. Hidden flavors are extracted from the hops and grains golden color and sparkling life are always present a more active fermentation of the yeast cells is created, thereby making the beer more digestible and of constant purity. No detr. mental changes take place when the beer is bottled and chilled. yln Outstanding TroducL Olympie Beer ii a high dau product made la one of America's exceptional Breweries . . . under extremely sani tary conditions . . . of premium quality barley-malt, cereals, hops and our famous subterranean .pring water. Olympia Beer ii sold by dealers on the basis of Its merits. BEER 'Its the Water Mason Ehrman & Company Distributers for ihi Blui Sttit Sign tnd iti Oltmpit Dupinttr'i Ctrtifualt wbm s fd fU Draught But ua hi fmi