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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1939)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 10. 1939. PAGE FIVE V Society By Clara Group to Attend Taming of Shrew Leaving for Portland this after noon by motorcar will be Mr. and Mrs. Almus Pruitt, Miss Gertrude Butler and Angus Bowmer, director of drama at the Southern Oregon College of Education. The group plan to attend the "Taming of the Shrew" in Port land Saturday evening. Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontane, famous actors will carry the leading parts. The Pruitts, Miss Butler and Mr. Bowmer are all active mem bers of the Shakespearean Festi val association which produces annual plays in the Elizabethan theater in Ashland. They will be the house guests of Mr. Bow mer's parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. Bowmer in the northern city. Oaklanders Here For Brief Stay Mr. and Mrs. Jack Heming way of Oakland, Cal., were brief visitors in Medford yes terday and the guests of Mrs. A. B. Cunningham. The Hemingways recently re turned west from New York where they attended the world's fair. Later they stopped in Balti more, Md., to visit A. B. Cun ningham and his son Bill Cun ningham, who moved from Med ford to that city several months ago. The visitors were enroute to Seattle, Wash., for a stay. t P. T. A. Activities The Medford council of Par ent-Teachers association met this week for dessert luncheon at the home of Mrs. Jack Swem on Ross Court. Jackson school members were hostesses. Membership drive was cussed during the session. dis- (Contributed) Are you a member of the or ganization that is doing more for your child than any other single agency in the United States? Do you realize that twenty-five thousand Parent Teacher associ ation members in Oregon are continually fighting for you. safeguarding the interests of your child, in order that he may enjoy the benefits of our great democracy? , A small charge for dues al lows you to become an active member In this vital organiza tion and helps provide child welfare work. Under-privileged children are given milk, lunches and clothing. The Parent Teachers associa tion is the great connecting link between the school and the par ents. Neither of us can work without the cooperation of the other. Through your forethought and generosity you are providing a beautiful school for your chil dren. Let this school be a genu ine monument of Democracy in which every parent will feel it is his school as well as his child's school. A membership in the Parent Teachers association is the grandest start we can make in demonstrating an interest in our children. Announcement Salem Brewery Association is pleased to announce the appointment of Mcdonald candy company as its exclusive distributor for PREMIUM LAGER Salem Brewery Association, Salem, Oregon and Clubs Mary Davis Many to Spend Holiday Away Mr. and Mrs. Weldon McBee will be among the numerous Medfordites attending the Ore gon State college-University of Oregon football game in Eugene tomorrow. The couple will be the house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Spiller in the college town. Mrs. Spiller is the former Jeanne Laidley of this city. Others planning to spend the Armistice Day holiday out of town are Miss Audrey Davis who will motor up to Salem to visit relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Bud Fuhrman will travel to Chico, Cal., for the week-end to be the guests of Mr. Fuhrman's uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Graves. Mrs. Paris Is Hostess to Class Mrs. Fay Paris was hostess Tuesday evening at the J. H. Owen home on Siskiyou Heights to the Golden Links Sunday school class of the First Baptist church. The occasion was a shower honoring Mrs. L. S. Steverson who received many lovely gifts. Twenty-seven guests were present and enjoyed refresh ments during the evening. Car Ion Piatt, Josephine Mead and Edith Whillock, W.W.G. girls, assisted Mrs. Paris in serving. College Women Meet Saturday The Rogue Valley College Wo men's club will meet tomorrow at 2:30 o'clock in the Girls' Com munity club on North Bartlett street. The hostesses are Miss Lucille Abbott and Miss Clare Gume lius, and the social chairman is Mrs. Fred Wagner of Ashland. The book review is entitled "American Earth: The Biog raphy of a Nation," by Carlton Beals, and will be given by Mrs. R. C. VanValzah. What the Girl Scouts Are Doing Girl Scouts in uniform are to assemble at King street and South Oakdale avenue tomor row morning preparatory to marching in the Armistice par ade. Scouts are to dress in uni form and bring Girl Scout and American flags. 1 Carkins Hosts To House Guest Mr. and Mrs. Everett Carkin have as their house guest at their home on South Holly street, Mrs. William Tirre of Grants Pass. The visitor is the sister of Mrs. Carkin. Calendar Friday. 6:30 p. m. Dinner, Presbyte rian church. Phoenix. 7:30 p. m. Baptist social, church. 8:00 p. m. Elta Deuel Hubbs, armory. Saturday 2:30 p. m. College Women, Girls' Community clubhouse. j i Pythian Sisters Sponsor Carnival Pythian Sisters will sponsor a carnival at the K. P. hall next Friday, November 17. A variety of activities will be offered during the evening in cluding a fish pond, music and a freak show. Mrs. Pain Home From Bay City Mrs. W. H. Paine returned to her home on north Orange street this morning by train from San Francisco where she has spent the past three weeks. EUGENE STUDIES Eugene, Ore., Nov. 10. 0M J. W. McArthur, Eugene water board superintendent, indicated yesterday that building an addi tion to the Eugene power plant might prove better and cheaper than buying Bonneville power. Additional power can be manufactured by the city for 1.2 cents per kilowatt hour for the next 10 years compared to Bonneville's price of 1.545 cents, he claimed. McArthur said negotiations would continue and stressed that the situation should not be in terpreted as a "fight with Bonne ville." He said he doubted whether Eugene would surren der home control of rates Eugene and Tacoma, Wash., have the lowest rates in the United States. PAYMENTS TO JOBLESS RECORD LOW IN OCTOBER Salem, Nov. 10. (IP) Im proved business conditions en abled the state unemployment compensation commission during October to pay the smallest amount in claims since the first jobless payments were made al most two years ago. The October total was $181,- 693, compared with $212,652 in October, 1938. Benefits paid dur ing the first 10 months of this year totaled $3,691,288, or 29.5 per cent below the total for the same period last year. Advic To Ministers Portland, Nov. 10. (JP) Dr. Wallace E. Brown, bishop of the northwest Methodist churches, urged ministers last night to keep free of war propaganda and direct attention to the "main business of pointing men toward God." Pure As MT31 SUGAR J I V ' THE ONLY W j l;;"mm MADE IN Telephone SERVICE is at your 6nger tips wherever you may go. It's ready sod eager to take your voice home. The ideal of the Bell System is to give at all times, dependable, accurate, speedy sod friendly telephone service, constantly improved and extended in scope by research and invention, st a price to the users as low ss efficient operation can make it. THE PACIFIC TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY West Sixth Street. Phont 1720. HOUSEWIVES TOLD MEAT IMPORTANT AR1ICLNN OIET Miss Jessie Alice Cline Dem onstrates Cooking Phases Before Large Gathering By Maude Pool Importance of meat in the diet was stressed to six hundred wo men attending the meat cookery school held in the junior high school auditorium yesterday afternoon by Miss Jessie Alice Cline, professor of bonus econom ics at the university of Missouri. "Meat is not the cause of any known disease, and should be the center of the meal on account of its nutritive value," Miss Cline said. Foods prepared by Miss Cline in the demonstration were awarded at the close of the after noon. Mrs. Ivan Edwards of Ash land was awarded a roast fresh from the oven and other awards went to Mrs. Lena West, 410 East Main, Medford: Mrs. Emma Jones, 506 Bcatty street; Mrs. T. R. Randolph of Medford: Mrs. S. Ohrt of Roxy Anne; Miss Opal Barnhart. Medford: Mrs. Lance Offenbacher, Applegate. Students Interested Home economics students of the local high schools were par ticularly interested in meeting Miss Cline, since she is co-au thor of one of their text books, "Food, Its Selection and Prepa ration." Students from classes of Mrs. Virginia Wait and Miss Marie Luce of the junior and senior high schools attended. Miss Cline, who holds three degrees from her university, as well as her professorship, was not too busy to talk about Med ford's pears, although she con fessed she didn't think of them in time to get pear rings instead of apples on the pork chops which she prepared in the dem onstration. "I had the most de licious Medford pears for break fast that I ever had in my life," Miss Cline remarked. "I am from Missouri, but we get your Med ford pears back there, and I know that Medford is the pear center of the world." Mrs. Mack Introduces Miss Cline was introduced by They Come!" BUY WHITE SATIN SUGAR IT'S PURE FINE GRANULATED QUICK DISSOLVING Mrs. Mabel Mack, home demon stration agent, who arranged for the school sponsored by the Ore gon State college extension ser vice, in cooperation with the Na tional Livestock and Meat board of Chicago. Mrs. Grace Craw ford of Medford assisted Miss Cline with her demonstration. California Oregon Power com pany supplied two Westinghouse ranges and a frigidaire for the demonstration, and Trowbridge and Flynn Electric company fur nished an electric mixer. Meat is of great economic im portance in the United States. Miss Cline said, in that thirty million people are dependent on some phase of the meat industry. The speaker pointed out import ance of knowledge of cuts of meat and their location in the animal in order that methods of cooking may be better deter mined. She based her demon stration on the cookery of tender cuts of meat by dry heat and cooking of the less tender types by moist heat, developing these divisions into their numerous technical phases. The school yesterday was the fifth and last to be held in Ore gon, and Miss Cline said that she is leaving the state with many pleasant memories. THIEVES TAKE OFF Tulsa, Okla. (JP) Virtually an arsenal on wheels, an ar mored car belonging to Joseph T. Miller, police equipment salesman, was stolen recently from its parking spot on a street. It was missing two days before officers found it parked not far from the home of the superin tendent of the police identifica tion bureau. The thieves had not molested a sub-machine gun, bullet-proof vest, tear gas guns and 1,000 rounds of ammunition with which the car was equipped. Closing time for Tou Lat to Clas sify Ads Is 1:30 p m when "T 1 said to myself, Same recipe same butter and eggs, same oven same cook (that's me) what can be the trouble with my baking?' "There was Just one thing left the flour "Then I remembered about a blended flour Fisher's Blend and I asked my grocer. "He said, 'Fisher's Blend is just the flour for youl It always acts the same. It's made of different kinds of wheat chosen from a hundred varieties to make an ideal Every-PURPOSE family flour. And, with millions of bushels of wheat in Its own storage to choose from with unsurpassed equipment and exacting scientific controls, Fisher's keeps this Blend always the same and always just right!"' That's exactly the point I No two kinds of wheat make the same kind of flour. By careful selection the great Fisher Mills give you always the fine, every-purpose flour you need. Just tell your grocer BLEND FLOUR "IIND Ml A SACK OF AFFITITI" A Handysack of Fisher's Wneef Germ rich in the Vitamin B that helps make children went to eet Msry Mills recipee to show many new ways to use it Ask your grocer. RED CROSS HEADS AND LIFE SAVERS TO DINE MONDAY A luncheon-meeting for Jack son county directors of the American Red Cross and others interested in life-saving and first aid will be held in the Hotel Medford Monday at noon, George T. Frey, chapter chair man, announced today. Persons desiring to attend were asked to telephone 456 for reserva tions. Attending the luncheon will be Commodore W. E. Longfel low, assistant director of first aid and life-saving, and Ben W. Carpenter, first aid and life-saving field representative for Ore gon, both of whom will arrive Sunday. ' Mr. Carpenter will conduct a special course for instructors in life-saving and water safety from November 13 through No vember 18. To be eligible for the course, Mr. Frey said, stu dents must be life-saving exam iners and hold water safety cer tificates. To receive a certifi cate for the course, the student must attend every class, he added. "The purpose of the instruc tors' course," Mr. Frey said, "is to have trainees review their previous instruction and take additional training with the idea of becoming lay instruc tors so that they may impart their knowledge to others." 45th Traffic Death Portland, Nov. 10. (JP) A collision between a street car and an automobile at Northeast Union avenue and Baldwin street, killed H. M. Nutter, re tired policeman, early today. Mrs. Nutter, the only other oc cupant of the auto, was seriously injured. Nutter's death was Portland's 45th traffic fatality this year. "DON'T CALL IT GOOD LUCK MY baking turns out like this!" SABr OETS (FECIAL ATTINTION Every Handysack of Fisher's FARINA comes cellophane-seeled, for special protection and Baby thinks it's grand for breekfaat. Mary Mills' famous recipee come wilb It. Tanker Changes Flag Boston, Nov. 10. (JP) Man ned by a Canadian crew, the tanker H. H. Rogers, recently changed from American regis try, headed southward today un der the flag of Panama bound for Colombia to get a cargo of oil. The tanker is operated by the Standard Oil company of New Jersey. Legion Hall Burns Oakville. Wash . Nnv. 1(1 m Fire of undetermined origin another cup ? you bet! lipton's sure has more flavor, mother tastes so smooth and miliovv. and it certainly nrn a r,-, , ... ..of tTERE'S why Lipton's is Amer ica's most popular tea: I. World -Famous Flavor smooth, full, rich, delicious. 1. Tender Young Leaves and lus cious, flavorful buds give extra fragrance and bouquet. 3. Distinctive Slond with choice teas from Lipton's own Ceylon gar dens. 4. Iconomlcol you use less Linton's per cup it's so rich in flavor. 1 xji m liei jWWibH'X. LintstiniB TOtTI "Otoe vnii ii D" sieiss afar as w aa - -1 j. eft-lay udL M. .s. Dark Fruit Cake Yield: 5 H lb: Fill 2 pans 8 W nrf 1 pn 4 x 4" Vi lb. butter 1 cupful sugar 5 eggs 14 cup sour milk cup molassee teaspoon soda 2 cups Blend Flout 1 plcg. dates, etoned and cut 1 scant tap. each mace, cloves, cinnamon, allspice end nutmeg Mix grape juice with raisins and rose water with cur rants and let stand overnight. Cream the shortening well and add sugsr gradually and mix until very well blended. Add well-beaten eggs, molasses, and milk. Sift Blend Flour, apices and eoda together and com bine with first mixture, reserving part of the flour to flour the fruit. Add fruit lest and mix welL Line pans with heavy brown paper. Bake 1 hour at 275 then IVi to 2 hours at 300, depending on size of pane. The tops of the loaves may be decorated with candled frulta and nuts. . f HAT SUNDAY MOSNINO WAFFll SMAKFAITI A perfect cinch, too, with Mary Mills recipes ihst come with your 2 -pound Hemlysack of Fisher's Pancake and Waffle Flour. Ask your grocer. early today destroyed the Oak ville American Legion hall, a large warehouse, partially guted the A. C Miller store and for a time threatened the town's en tire business district. GLASSES Dr. R. M. Hood Optometrist Sparta Bldg. Main and Riverside. Medford. Ore. Skillful Service Reasonable Prices I GUESS WE ALL LIKE UPTONi BETTER, TOM AND IT'S ECONOMICAL, TOO MORE THAN 200 CUPS 0 THE POUND! lunnwul kuflMil Uubu.l.. s II I WW Wf Vi Ids. seeded raisins I lb. currants or seedless raisins lb. citron, cut In pieces Vi lb. almonds, blanched and cut Vt lb. package candled orange peel Vi lb. candled cherries 2 tblspa. rose water 2 tblapa. grape juice SPECIAL OFFER NEW (of. tin) PAN by AWRO "2mootkU" Extra Thick HorJ Alvmimm BtaUTltt Rim. SMai-Fprm Hand!, htndr Cup MiMtwtmtat SaaJSB&p Bottom Thli will b tht bujUtt pan la rent kitchen. Kiy to cUan. Built lor I if llmt of tervlct. Full 1 Quart capiclty ll'i a 50 value. And httt'a how rtw mtt itt Send onlr 2S4 and aalta tils, cath r-!iitr rcct.pt or any other proof of purchaa of FUhtr't Blend Flour (any ilie nek) or atnd pick ate top of FUher'a Bitkit Mix to Pither Plourlnt Milt Co., Seattle, Waeh. Priit name and addreaa plainly. Offer ood for limited tlma only. 881 TO THE POUND! 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