Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 08, 1952, Image 4

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    FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Tuesday, July 8, 1952
Society and Clubs
Miss Anderson Wed '
To Elgan Amidon
In Nevada Service
The wedding of Miss Joan E.
Anderson, daughter-of Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Meads, 343 Apple
street, to Elgan E. Amidon,
United States Air Force, took
place in Carson City, Nev., June
28. Mr. Amidon is a son of Mr.
and Mrs. E. C. Amidon, 730
West Eleventh street, Medford.
The single-ring ceremony was
performed by Justice W. E. Dun
field at 11 . o'clock in the
morning.
For her wedding the bride
wore a suit of white wool with
navy accessories, and her flow
ers were red roses.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Cook,
brother-in-law and sister of the
bridegroom, attended the cou
ple. Mrs. Cook wore a gray suit
with corsage of white and pink
roses.
The newlywed couple made
a wedding trip to Virginia City
and Lake Tahoe and at present
are with the bride's parents.
The bride was graduated from
Modoc High school, Alturas,
Calif., and is employed at Pacific
Telephone and Telegraph com
pany. The bridegroom, who was
graduated from Medford High
school in 1947, attended South
ern Oregon college until 1950
and then taught school. Later he
enlisted in the United States Air
force and is now stationed at
Keesler base, Blloxi, Miss.
Mrs. Amidon will make her
home with her parents for the
present while the bridegroom re
turns to service with the USAF.
The bride and her parents
came here from California two
years ago while the Amidon fam
ily has lived in the valley many
years.
The tensile strength of copper
varies greatly according to the
physical condition of the metal.
Guests To Attend
Portland Wedding;
Return from Coast
A number of friends and rela
tives of Miss Caryl Delzell,
Portland, will be in that city
next week-end to attend her
wedding to Harry E. Mangan.
The wedding is set for July 12
at Cathedral of the Immaculate
Conception. Miss Delzell is a
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thom
as W. Delzell.
Attendfng from here will be
the bride's uncle and aunt, Mr.
and Mrs. Don Newbury, her
cousin, Mrs. James Denison and
Mr. Denison, and Mr. and Mrs.
John C. Boyle, long-time friends
of the Delzel family.
Another uncle and aunt of the
bride, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sav
age and children, Harold and
Tommy, will arrive in Medford
tonight from Phoenix, Ariz., and
will continue north later this
week.
Some of the Medford guests
will also attend the rehearsal
dinner at the University club
July 11 for which Mr. and Mrs.
Rollin P. Rodolph of San Fran
cisco will be hosts.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Newbury,
Gus Newbury and the Denisons
with their children, Sharon and
Diane, spent the July Fourth
vacation as guests of Mr. and
Mrs. John L. Delzell, Newport.
Mrs. Denison and children are
remaining for this week and will
continue to Portland from New
port. Honored at- Party
Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Frame
were hosts Thursday evening at
a party which honored Mrs.
Stanley Jacobs of Victoria, B. C.
The event was a buffet supper at
the Frame's home in Phoenix.
Twelve attended the supper.
Mrs. Jacobs is a guest in Med
ford of her brother-in-law and
sister, the Rev. and Mrs. George
R. V. Bolster.
PLENTY OF
King Nectar Berries
AVAILABLE WEDNESDAY
AND REST OF WEEK
QUALITY MARKET
Newest Fashion
H
R9024
12-20
Fashion says embroidery is
news this summer! Its a colorful
touch on this simple-sew dress,
or for a frosty-cool look on a
melting' summer day, embroider
the pockets in white. So easy,
You'll do it 1-2-3 quick! Grace
ful skirt, cap sleeves, airy neck
line.
Pattern R9024: Misses' Sizes
12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16 takes
4 yards 39-inch. Transfer in
cluded. This easy-to-use pattern gives
perfect fit. Complete, illustrated
Sew Chart shows you every
step.
Send Thirtyifive cents in
coins for this pattern to Marian
Martin, care of The Medford
Mail Tribune, Pattern Dept.
P.O. Box 6740,, Chicago SO, 111
Print plainly YOUR NAME, AD
DRESS, SIZE and STYLE NUM
BER". '.
Here
Mrs. Sam MacCorkle and two
children, Lyn and John, of Char
leston, West Virginia, have ar
rived in Medford to spend a
month with Mrs. MacCorkle's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Cum
mins, 2447 Hillcrest road.
Bolsters Leave
On Vacation Trip
The Rev. and Mrs. George R.
V. Bolster and Mrs. Bolster's
sister, Mrs. Stanley Jacobs of
Victoria. B. C, plan to leave this
afternoon for Victoria.. Mrs. Ja
cobs has been a guest here of
her brother-in-law and sister, and
the Bolsters' trip north will be
the first part of their annual
vacation.
Mrs. Bolster plans to remain
in Victoria .with relatives until
the last of July, and Mr. Bolster
will fish in Canada and in Ore
gon during the remainder of the
month. .
The Rev. Mr. Bolster is rector
of St. Mark's Episcopal church
and his parish work will be car
ried on in part by the Rev,
J.M.B. Gill, retired Episcopal
minister who makes his home
with the Bolsters, and C Elwood
Hedberg, lay reader.
t-
Sergeant and family ....
Visit Relatives Here
T, Sgt. Herbert R. Fitzgerald,
Mrs. Fitzgerald and their daugh
ter, Debby, spent the past two
weeks visiting the sergeant's
mother, Mrs. Delia Fitzgerald,
118 Tripp street. The couple also
visited Sergeant Fitzgerald's sis
ter, Mrs. Warl Weaver, 841 East
Ninth street; another sister, Mrs.
William J. Busse, Talent; a broth
er, J. W. Fitzgerald and a sis
ter. Mrs. George Silver, -Sams
Valley.
Sergeant Fitzgerald is with
headquarter's squadron, F i f
teen Air Force, March field, Riv
erside, Calif. He has been sta
tioned at the base for the last
4V years and is crew chief of a
C-54. The sergeant has been in
the service for the past nine
years.
Auxiliary To Hold
Meeting Thursday
Central Point The auxiliary
to Myers-Holland American Le
gion post, will hold its last meet
ing of the summer, Thursday,
July 10 at 8 p.m. A potluck sup
per will be served at 6:30 p.m.
Members of the . post and fam
ilits and auxiliary members are
invited to attend and take a cov
ered dish.
Standing committees will be
appointed and plans made for
the year's work beginning in
September, it is announced, and
details will be discussed.
Frinks at Lake
Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Frink,
Thomas road, spent the July
Fourth holiday a Lake o'Woods
as guests of Secretary of State
Earl T.-' Newbry and Mrs. New
bry, who have a summer home
at the lake.
CALENDAR
Calendar noUcet and newt for
the society section of The Nail
Tribnn must bo in Knitted la
writing, and deadline for the San
day edition is 1 pjn. Friday. Dead
line for weekly news is i pjn. the
day before publication and dead
line for the weekly calendar is
9 ajn. of the day for publication.
Tuesday
8:00 p.m. Degree of Honor,
KP hall.
8:00 p.m. Pythian club, home
of Mrs, H. D. Howard, 1453
Orchard Home drive.
8 p.m. Ladies' Mounted
troop, at Posse clubhouse.
8 p.m. - DAV auxiliary, ex
ecutive meeting, home of Mrs.
Warren Goddard, 524 North
Riverside avenue.
Wednesday
10:30 a.m. Roxy Gardeners.
Hawthorne Park.
12 noon Townsend, Haw
thorne park.
1 p.m. Mistletoe club, Girls
Community club.
1:30 p.m. Food freezing dem
onstration, Evans Valley school.
Thursday '
2 p.m. Phoenix Presbyter
ian Ladies Aid society at church.
Weavers Announce
Exhibit Wednesday
Rogue Valley Handweavers
guild will sponsor an exhibit and
weaving demonstration by Mrs.
Leah A. Allen at Girls' Commu
nity club Wednesday, July 9.
Mrs. Allen is bringing a loom to
Medford for the demonstration.
The exhibit will open at 7 p.m.
and demonstration of the loom
will be at 8 p.m. Mrs. Allen has
been weaving for 25 years and
has a large exhibit of containing
articles as varied as hats and
shoes.
Guild members stated that
anyone . interested is invited to
attend.
Officers Elected
By Lady Activians
Medford Lady Activians elect
ed officers at their last meeting
held at the home of Mrs. H- C.
Coppedge, 139 Keene Way drive.
Mrs. Clifford Bishop will be
president for the next six
months. Others elected are Mrs
H. D. Wilson, vice president,
and Mrs. Galen Knox, secretary-
treasurer. Retiring officers are
Mrs. H. C. Coppedge, president;
Mrs. Clifford Bishop, vice presi
dent; and Mrs. E. D. Davis, secre
tary-treasurer.
The group will meet Thursday
evening, July 10, at the home of
Mrs. H. B. Metzger, 1216 West
8th street.
4 i ,
Women sleep more quietly
than , men, scientists : say. Their
sleep movements are fewer by
30 per cent.
f v$ v" wLM. ii
I '"4 ?W A 4 v-- 5fV I
Blouse Week!
Here are Blouses with a Fresh 'New ;
Look . .. All from Leons Tremen-L'
dous Blouse Stock in their Sports
Dept. . . Literally Hundreds of Out
standing Blouses from some of the
Nation's Famous Lines ... A
Wonderful Selection of Styles,
Colors and Materials ... and
at Such Popular Low Prices
too ...
"Plaids"
Perfectly Matched!
Whites . . . Pastels . . . Prints
Crepes . . . Batistes ...
Nylons ... Sharkskins
Cottons of All Kinds
Sleeveless . . . Short or Long
Sleeves
Barrymore . . . Peter Pan
Convertible Collars
Famous Brands such as . . .
Ship n Shore ... Arlene
. . , Judy Bond . . . Cam
eron . . . Suede and many
others
69 "1 aQ
Vblous
a
- A
Aes
1 V
W 1
Washable
tons ,
i Linens
Honey Historical, Popular
Says Food Store Expert -
While Americans can't pay
their taxes in honey, as ancient
Egyptians did, they still like to
eat it.
This is borne out by the fact
that honey production in 1951
hit an all-time high of 249,053,
000 pounds.1 Honey is so popu
ar as a food now that we've ev
en got a national "Honey for
Breakfast Week." '
The history of honey is as fas
cinating as that of the flowers
from which nectar is drawn by
the bees who make the honey.
Bees from one hive may visit a
quarter-million flowers in one
day searching for nectar; it takes
about 37,000 loads of nectar to
make one pound of honey. Down
through history, honey has been
used as a beverage, as medicine,
as a dowry and even as a ritual
offering to the sun.
Many kinds of honey are pro
duced in this country, varying
according to the horticulture cf
various regions. There is honey
from clover, which grows in
practically every section of the
United States, and honey from
orange blossoms and sage. There
is tupelo honey from the tupelo
trees which grow in Florida and
other parts of the South. There
is honey from chinkapin, mes
quite, basswood, horsemint and
alfalfa, to name some moie.
There also is buckwheat honey
from the midwest and far west
which is used mainly for baking
and commercial candy , produc
tion. Popular demand is divided be
tween a blend of sage-orange
blossom-clover and straight clov
er honey, according to an A & P
food store expert, one of . 'the
nation's leading retailer distrib
utors of the sweet.
Most of the orange blossom
honey comes from California.
Clover honey is especially
abundant in New York state and
also is widely produced else
where. Sage honey comes from
southern California.
Historically, honey goes back
virtually to the beginning of
time. The Bible refers to Pales
tine as a land flowing with milk
and.honsy and tells how Jacob,
when he sent his son to Egypt,
had him .take a gift of honey to
the ruler of that land. Ancient
Egyptians used honey to pay
their taxes and the Mqhamme
dans revered the sweet as a
miraculous medicine. The in
habitants of Peru offered the
sweet in' their rites to the sun
and prospective bridegrooms in
the Middle East used it as a
dowry. In Rome it was a serious
breach of etiquette not to offer
honey to a guest.
Honey was made into a bev
erage in India and those who
drank it believed they would
gain strength, wisdom, happi
ness and other admirable traits.
In Poland and Silesia, farmers
tied honey-dipped strings around
their fruit trees to insure a good
crop. At funerals in Egypt, Mor
occo, Rome and the Hindu lands,
containers of honey were placed
in tombs both as food for the
dead and as omens of good.
Ancient stories referred to
honey as "nectar of the gods."
Aristotle, the Greek philosopher,
called it "dew distilled from the
stars and the rainbow." The Ro
man poet Virgil wrote in verse
of "heaven-born honey."
They referred only to honey's
delicious flavor. Since . their
time, science has proven that
honey also has nutritional value.
It contains many minerals and
has an abundant supply of vita
mins B and C. Moreover, since
about 80 per cent of its composi
tion is sugars, it far surpasses
most other foods as a source of
energy. Honey also is the only
manufactured sweet available in
commercial quantities.
Son and Daughter
Return to Schools
Myrna " and Howard Huener
gardt, son and daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Huenergardt,
route 1, box 483, left for their
schools last week-end after visit
ing here with their parents. Miss
Huenergardt returned to Glen
dale Sanitarium and Hospital,
Glendale, Calif., where she is a
student nurse, and her brother
has left for Collegedale, Tenn.,
where he is a senior in Southern
Missionary college. The young
man is a biology student.
Miss Fern Leaver
Home From Albany
Miss Fern Leever returned to
her home at 707 Oak street last
evening after having visited her
brother, Russell Leever, and his
family in Albany.
During his term as president
George Washington vetoed only
two bills.
A bush variety of buttercup
squash has been developed,
making that vegetable practical
for the home garden. The vine
formerly took, so much space
that only someone with at least
one-nait acre ox ground was
able to plant it. ,
Husbands To Be Guests
Of Past Noble Grands
Past Noble Grands club of
Olive" Rebekah' lodge will have
a- picnic for members and their
husbands at 5:30 p.nv Sunday,
July 13, at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. W. H. Dyer, 29 Myrtle
street.
Coffee, cream and rolls will
be furnished. Those attending
are asked to bring a lunch cloth,
covered dish, and their own serv
ice. On the committee to assist the
Dyers are Mrs. A. H. Gregry,
co-chairman, and Mrs. Dana
Bowers. Mrs. Arthur Scarseth
and Mrs. Minnie Bryant.
1
Guest Honored
. Mrs. Mary Schuler Grosh was
the honor guest at a party last
week at the home of Mrs. Harry
Barneburg. Co-hostesses with
Mrs. Barneburg were Mrs. Don
Anderson and Mrs. Harry Bry
ant. Members' of the Pythian
Sisters were the invited guests.
Cards were played. A gift was
presented to Mrs. Grosh, after
which refreshments were served.
Approximately 30 attended.
Fire-Damaged Erria
Arrives in Rotterdam
Portland (U.PJ The Danish
motorship Erria, which caught
fire at Astoria last December 20
with loss of 11 lives, arrived at
Rotterdam, The Netherlands, on
Saturday in tow of the Dutch
tug Zwarte Zee, representatives
of the firm which owns the tug
said here.
The 8900-mile voyage from
Portland required 51 days. The
Erria will be rebuilt into a
freighter.
WEATHER By United Press
North California: Fair Tues
day and Wednesday except scat
tered afternoon thunderstorms
in mountains.
IIIDCSI
ANGEL FOOD
Ouirli CLVt Miv
just odd wattrl J J
YOU'LL ENJOY
Breakfast
HERE
NEW HOURS:
Open 6:00 a.m. - Close 8:00 p.m.
franklin's cafe
Harry Stratman
Travis Mitchell
Wed., Thurt., Ffi., Sat.
3-P. jBEE5VJ 3 (yiDITIS
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OPEN WEDNESDAY NIGHTS
UNTIL 9 P.M.
588
ALWAYS BITTER BUYS AT
101 S. RIVERSIDE
PHONE 2-6882