EIGHT MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Friday. April 18. 1952;
Society and Clubs
Summer Set
Report Summarizes
Society's Activities
For State President
Activities of the Women's
Auxiliary to Jackson County
Medical society were summarized
at a recent meeting of the auxil
iary which honored Mrs. W.
Wells Baum, president of the
Women's Auxiliary to the Ore
gon State Medical society. The
report was made by Mrs. Ray
L. Casterline, publicity chair
man of the auxiliary.
The report showed that the
auxiliary provided food for a
needy family at Christmas, gave
toys to both hospitals for the use
of small patients, and members
have sewed or given other volun
' teer help for the city's hospitals.
The group's main activity was
said to be in connection with
the Red Cross blood bank pro
gram, with members serving as
blood donors and helping as the
collection center.
It was also pointed out that
members of the auxiliary are
active in many groups of the
city. From the auxiliary's rank
come the vice-chairman and six
members of the Jackson county
committee of the American Can
cer society; the vice-president,
publicity chairman and executive
board member of the Jackson
County Public Health associa
tion; the TB seal sale chairman
for the county, numerous mem
bers of the Medford Health
group which aids the TB seal
drive annually and provided vol
unteers to aid the recent chest
x-ray survey, and the chairman
and one member of the Jackson
county committee of the Arthri
tis and Rheumatism foundation.
The survey also showed mem
bers of the auxiliary belonging
to groups of all types in the city,
and in many instances serving as
officers of these groups.
Officers of the auxiliary at
present are Mrs. Richard L.
Sleeter, president; Mrs. Reinhold
Kanzlcr, corresponding secre
tary; Mrs. Fred T. Burich, re
cording secretary; Mrs. O. T.
Heyerman, treasurer? Mrs. B.
Brandt Bartels, program chalr
an, and Mrs. Casterline, public
ity and blood bank chairman.
f
Tickets on Sate
For Coming Concert
Medford Musical societv mem
bers are now at work selling
tickets for the society's annual
concert, set for Tuesday, April
22, at Medford Senior High
school auditorium.
Tickets may be obtained from
Purucker's or Prultt's music
stores or Cameo Beauty salon,
Proceeds from the event will be
used for the society's scholarship
fund.
Featured artists for the pro
gram will be Josephine Spaul
dlng, Portland, mezzo soprano,
and Doris Helen Calkins, Eugene,
harpist. The latter will be as
sisted by a string quartet from
Eugene.
New Sunsemble
'
High School Girls
Named Delegates
For Youth Session
Six high school girls left yes
terday for Salem to attend the
annual Oregon youth legislative
session sponsored by the YMCA
of Oregon.
Attending from Medford are
Misses Connie Clark and Alberta
Poole, Sophomore Tri-Hi-Y; Miss
es Sally Harris and Katheryn
McAllister, Junior Tri-Hi-Y;
Misses Vivian Powell and Fran
ces Troxcll, Senior Tri Debs.
Miss McAllister has been named
a reporter for the senate and
Miss Troxell will be chaplain of
the senate.
Every year several hundred
boys and girls visit the capital
for three days and take Over the
machinery of state government
in this YMCA citizenship pro
gram. The young people act as
legislators, officers, newspaper
reporters and as lobbyists.
The Medford group has taken
an active part in writing bills
which they will submit during
the session. Juniors drafted a bill
on periodical re-examination of
Oregon drivers, and the senior
bill concerns use of sprinkling
systems and fire lines for lumber
mills, and making it a require
ment to use refuse burners.
Large Delegation
Bethel Members
At State Meeting
Central Point Fifty-two
members of Jobs Daughters,
Central Point bethel, left Thurs
day morning for Roseburg to
attend the three-day grand ses
sion of Oregon Jobs 'Daughters.
Ihey will take part in the com
petitiva drills which will be held
Saturday afternoon.
Central Point bethel has had
an entry In the drills at the
grand session for the past three
years, and two years ago won
first prize in one division.
All officers of Central Point
bethel and the Ashland bethel
and four officers from the Med
ford chapter will give the Me
morial services at the session.
Miss Joan Henderson, soloist of
of Central Point bethel, will be
soloist for the service.
Attending the session as dele
gates from the local bethel will
be Miss Esther Snook and Miss
Melva Chew. Miss Linda Oben
chain will take her office in the
state bethel as junior custodian.
Six adults will accompany the
girls for the three-day session.
Following the last meeting of
the Central Point bet.icl, 27
members and officers attend the
Installation of the Order of De-
Molny In Medford. Douglas
Smith, brother of Miss Marion
Smith, senior princess of Cen
tral Point bethel, was installed
as master councillor. Miss Smith
presented her brother with a
gavel.
At the June installation cere
monies, Miss Smith will be
crowned queen of the local
bethel by her brother.
Junior Club Members
Hold Party on Saturday
Degree of Honor Junior club
held the annual Easter party last
Saturday at the home of Mrs.
H..G. Wilson, the director. Dar
lene Morrow, president, con
ducted the business meeting.
Donny Gail won a prize, and
Virginia Carlson and Blaine
Wolfe tied for the Hiatt prize.
The children enjoyed playing
with magic bubbles on the lawn,
and the egg hunt was also held
outdoors. Tiffany Hollcnback
and Grants Schroeder won prizes
In the egg hunt, and Charlcne
Stcnnerson was prize winner in
the bean bag games.
Mrs. Delbert Durkee. Mrs.
Arthur Carlson and Lillian Win
ters were adult guests. Junior
guests were Roger Wright, Er
nest Jones, Gordon and Santo
Schroeder, David Peptock, Harry
Hammock, Dnnlyn Poppow and
Janice Sue Carlson.
The next meeting will be Mav
basket party May 10 at Lincoln
gymnasium. Prizes will be of
fered for the best May basketes.
Vv.T 7318
6ty r4u& 1Ba(2.
QUICK CROCHET! You'll
have baby's new booties, cap and
jacket finished in a jiffy! They
are made in open and closed
shell-stitches in 3-ply baby yarn.
Use white with pastel pink, blue,
or yellow.
Pattern 7318; crochet direc
tions for infants' cap, booties,
jacket.
Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
in coins for this pattern to Mail
Tribune, Household Arts Dept.,
P.O. Box 5640, Chicago 80, 111.
Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS
with PATTERN NUMBER.
Exciting! Our 1952 edition of
Alice Brooks Needlecraft Book!
Brimful of new ideas, it's only
Twenty cents. NINETY-ONE il
lustrations of patterns of your
favorite needlecraft designs plus
SIX easy-to-do patterns printed
right In the book.
Many Nations Like Coffee
But Americans Drink Most
Is it really true that the coffee served in the United States is
the best in the world? Of course it is for Americans! But don't
try to convince a European or a Latin American that our coffee
is better than his native brew, says the Pan-American Coffee bu
reau. You'll have an argument on your hands.
The fact is that coffee, as we
R9056
U 48
LOOK SMART and keeD cool
this summer! In sundress and
Jacket, you're crisp, businesslike,
and so comfortable. In sundress
you're happy on beach or lawn,
getting a beautiful tan! Slender
izing lines, scalloped details
Pattern R8056: Women's Size
34, 36. 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48. Size
36 sundress, 4 yards 35-inch; bo
lero, Hn yards 35-Inch fabric.
This easy-to-use pattern gives
perfect fit. Complete, illustrated
Sew Chart shows you every step.
Send Thirty-five cents in colm
for this pattern to Marian Mar
tin, care of Mail Tribune, Pat
tern Dept., P.O. Box 6740. Chi
cago, 80, 111. Print plainly YOUR
NAME, ADDRESS, SIZE and
STYLE NUMDEH,
Prospect Association
Plans Panel Discussion;
For Meeting Tuesday
Prospect A panel discussion
on "Allowances" will feature the
meeting of Prospect Parent
Teacher association, to be held
Tuesday, April 22. A potluck
supper at 6:30 p.m. will precede
the meeting.
Mrs. Heston Grieve will speak
as a parent, Wesley Stauffer as
the teacher and six young people
will present the students' views
Students taking part will be Jo
Anne Hollenbeak, Helen Robert
son, Clarence Neville, Judy Por
ter, Leonard Winslow and Bruce
Pingle.
During the business meeting
Mrs. George Hubbard and Mrs.
Lou Rogers will report on the
recent annual convention of Ore
gon Congress of Parents and
Teachers, which they attended.
Mrs. Howard Gregory will
take charge of arrangements for
the supper, and will be aided
by mothers of children in the
seventh grade. Child care will
be provided during the business
meeting.
Those attending are requested
to take table service and a hot
dish and salad if they have not
been contacted concerning food.
Plans for the meeting were
made when members of the ex
ecutive board met at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Heston Grieve
April 14.
Sororitv Member
At State Meeting
Miss Doris Drost, member of
the local chapter of Epsllon Sig
ma nipna sorority, win leave to
morrow fnr Tim rVi!l.,c r
attend the state convention of 'the
group April 19 and 20. She is a
nominee for the office of state
parliamentarian.
MisS Drnst Will rnnnri tn K
convention at a meeting of the
meuiura cnnpior set lor Monday,
April 21, at the home of Miss
Dolores Lee, 408 Medford Plaza
apartments.
The film, "Pioneering in Re
habilitation" was shown at the
last mcctinu of the ormm m,i.
was in connection with the an
nual r.asicr Seal work carried
on by the chapter.
Married
Mrs. Katherlne Seabrlght and
John Seabrlght were married
Saturdhy, April 5, the service be
ing read at Central Church of
Christ by the Rev. Don Byers.
The Seabrights, who have
been Jivir.s In M. I ir, n
leave .'or California where they
win live. They will first visit
relatives in San Diego.
CALENDAR
Calendar notices and naws lot
the sort.ty section of Tha Mall
Tribune must ba submitted in
wrtUnc. and deadline tor the Sun
day edition Is I p m r'rtd-ty Dead
Una (or weekly news Is a p-m the
day betore publication, and dead
Una for the weekly calendar Is
am ot the day tor publlcaUon
Friday
6 p.m. Howard PTA, at
schoolhouse.
6:30 p.m. Townsend Club No.
4, Pythian building.
6:30 p.m. Homcmakers' class,
Phoenix Presbyterian church, at
-'lurch.
6:30 p.m. Canton Siskiyou,1
Patriarchs Militant, and auxili
ary, lOOF hall.
7 p.m. Children's Spring'
Fashion parade, First Methodist :
church recreation room. '
7 p.m. Circle 7. WSCS, Metlv j
odlst church, at church. j
7:30 p.m. Credit Women's'
Breakfast club, small dining
room, Jackson hotel.
9 p.m. Phoenix May festival,
candidates ball, Phoenix Commu
nity club.
Saturday
3 to 9 p.m Jackson and Jo
sephine counties alumnae, Kap-;
pa Alpha Theta, Mrs. Grace C. 1
Collins, 1810 East Main street i
5 to 8 p.m. Presbyterian
church Cruisers club smorgas-
bord dinner, church social hall. ,
9 p.m. Rogue Valley Country
club spring formal at club. I
Cancel Meeting j
Shrlners' Wives have canceled ;
the meeting set for Monday, '
April 21, it is announced. The
meeting Is canceled in order to
permit members to attend a crab
supper planned by Shriners for
that evening at Rogue Vulley i
Country club. i
know it, is seldom found any
where outside of the United
States, the bureau states. How
do our coffee-drinking habits
compare with those of other
nationalities such as the French,
Italians and Brazilians? Even
the strongest American coffee
is mild in contrast with the
black brews they prefer.
Most of the coffee in this coun
try is drunk from full-sized cups;
most of theirs is drunk demi
tasse. The majority of North.
Americans like their coffee with
cream, a commodity which is
never served with Italian,
French or Brazilian coffee. We
share with them the drinking
of coffee for breakfast, but
theirs is mixed with hot milk,
which is, by the way, their only
deviation from the black. In each
land, coffee has a different mean
ing, a different place in daily
life. None of these bears much
resemblance to the American
version, the bureau says.
France is in many ways a
country of frantic hurry. Yet the
French have a deep capacity for
the enjoyment of leisure. This
is where coffee becomes an im
portant part of French life. The
tiny cup of "cafe filtre" is what
the Frenchman sips as he idles
away the hours at his favorite
sidewalk cafe. He sits, he ob
serves his fellow man, he soaks
up the warmth of the sun or he
turns up his collar against the
rain. And he drinks his coffee
hot and very black.
With the exception of break
fast, coffee is not necessarily an
accompaniment to meals in
France and is not included in
the price of the restaurant table
d'hote. Frequently, one has a
demitasse with fruit and cheese
for dessert, but mostly coffee is
the great between-times refresh
ment. "Cafe it is the drink for
dreaming!" a Parisian friend
said recently and that seems to
sum up the French attitude very
well.
The French like thier coffee
black, but the Italians like theirs
blacker. Their "espresso" is as
dark as a stormy midnight and
so bitter that most Americans
must add plenty of sugar to
make it drinkable. It Is usually
served with a sliver of lemon
peel, a touch which makes Ital
ian coffee a bit different from
any other. The first small cup
of espresso may be hard for the
American traveler to drink, but
if he stays in Italy for a while
he will discover that he develops
a real fondness for it.
Sidewalk cafes abound in It
aly, much as they do in France.
But the Italians also have their
coffee houses, many of them dat
ing back hundreds of years.
Rome, Florence, Venice, Naples
each has its "most famous cof
fee house and all of them do a
flourishing business all day long
and far into the night. "Espresso
. . . espresso . . , In Italy you
hear It everywhere and always.
If French coffee is black and
Italian coffee blacker, then Bra
zilian coffee is blackest of all. In
Brazil (and South America gen
erally) they like it so opaque
and heavy that it seems to have
a kind of thickness about it.
When it comes to sugar, Brazil
ians like their "cafezinho" sweet.
Two teaspoons of sugar to each
tiny cup, that s about average,
although some like it even
sweeter.
The greatest difference in the
coffee customs of Brazil and
those of Italy and France is in
the frequency with which it is
drunk. Coffee Is not only a part
of Brazilian home life and so
cial life, it is also an accompani
ment to every hour of the busi
ness day as well. It Is served In
office, store and factory. The of
fice boy drinks It as does the
president and each employee in
between. The customer gets his
share, too. All in all, the urban
Brazilian drinks about 10 cafe-
zinhos a day, often more.
The Frenchman thinks there is
no real coffee t-xcept his beloved
cafe filtre. The Italian likes his
espresso, the Brazilian his cafe
zinho. Like those who live in
the United States, each has a
deep loyalty to his own national
brew. But all, including our
selves, have one point in com
mon: We all love coffee, one
way or anoth r. And, in our own
favor, it must be added that
Americans seem to give fuller
approval to it than any other
country. At least, our per cap
ita consumption is the highest
in the world.
MEAT
Center
231 East 6th Street
I l:Ms$ Li
LADY LUCK ABSENT
riinchiire. Wafh. (U.R)
Mrs. Frances Verden didn't have
any luck at all when she iook
her test to obtain a driver's li
cense. With patrolman Tom Pre-
cious beside her, nirs.
stepped on the gas and backed
the car through the front wall
of the highway patrol office.
Dead Una Sunday Claasllled tl at
noon Saturdays.
Couple Honored
At Surprise Party
On Anniversary
Central Point The home of
Mrs. Signa J. Day, Central Point,
was the scene of a surprise an
niversary party April 11 for
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Stanley, Eagle
Point. It was in observance of
their 38th wedding anniversary
A mock wedding ceremony
was staged. Mrs. Darrell Stanley
was matron - of - honor for her
mother-in-law and Mr. Stanley
was best man for his father,
Dandelions were strewn in the
path of the bride by Mrs. Henry
Owens, flower girl. Mrs. Harry
Wright was ring - beater. Mr.
Wright acted as minister and
Mrs. Allene Rpzell was musician
Henry Owens acted as the bride's
father, and Mrs. Hannah Joseph
son as the bride's mother.
Decorations were of turnips,
carrots and beets and a large
head of cabbage represented the
wedding bell. The bride's bou
quet was of mustard blooms on
a miniature guest book, and
Mrs. Josephson's corsage was of
carrots.
A wedding dinner was served
by Mrs. Day, assisted by Mrs.
Henry Owens, with vegetables
and wild flowers decorating the
table. A wedding cake was serv
ed, and the honored couple pre
sented a number of gifts.
Attending were the honored
guests, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wright, Mr.
and Mrs. Darrell Stanley, Mr.
and Mrs. Victor Gardner, Mrs.
Allene Rozell, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Owens, Mrs. Nellie Day,
Mrs. Josephson and the hostess.
The Hat Rock area on the Co
lumbia river in Oregon will be
come a new recreational area
when the lake is formed behind
MeNary dam to be completed in
the near future.
THEY SURE LIKE IKE Eisenhower campaign workers whoop
it up in their Newark, N. J., headquarters after it became ap
parent he is the winner in the New Jersey Republican presidential
primary. The general ran far ahead of Senator Taft, as he did
in New Hampshire, and is assured of 37 of the state's 38 dele
gates to the national convention in July. Stassen ran a poor third.
Boat trips will be featured
this summer through awesome
Hells Canyon on the Snake river
between Idaho and Oregon. The
trips will run from Robinette,
Ore., to Lewiston, Ida.
fVOU'CL SAY OUR WORK
18 "JUST IMMt?NSC -J
I AND THAT 00R
CHARGE SHOWS
I COMMON
r i
To-Fair Prices!
SSoh SPECIAL
A
While
They
Last!
6 Ft. Redwood Barbecue gQ 1 95
Table and Benches
Scheffel Patio Supply
HIGHWAY 99 SOUTH Next to State License Bureau PHONE 2-5668
nnnn
If your house was built before 1929
ram i uj ei loop a i
PORK
SAUSAGE . . lb. 39c
SLICED
BACON . .. . lb. 35c
PORK
LIVER lb. 29c
PORK
STEAK .... lb. 49c
SMOKED PORK
CHOPS.... lb. 65c
FRESH SIDE
PORK lb. 45c
your wiring may not be adequate. for 1952
The jingle drop-cord from the ceiling ... an outlet in the kitchen ....
we all remember how little electricity was used for lighting or labor-saving
lp 1929. And the wiring was planned for this limited use. Today, in
1932, the picture has changed. Better lighting, labor-saving appliances,
new conveniences, and comforts . . . even your entertainment is now
electrical. More are being added every day. These additions
demand more outlets, more circuits, and heavier wire to bring all
this extra electricity Into your home. When you build or remodel . . ,
be sure the plans include wiring that is adequate ... for 1952.
See Your Electrical Contractor