Eisenhowers
Spend Night
In New Home
Gettysburg. Pa. U.R)
President and Mrs. Eisenhower
Friday spent their first night to
" gether in their first home, a
Gettysburg farmhouse they have
been remodeling for months.
"It is now a private family
home," presidential Press Sec
retary James C. Hagerty an
nounced. Which was another way
of saying "no newsmen and pho
tographers allowed."
The house is the first the Pres
ident and his wife have owned
in 33 years of married life. Here
tofore, they have lived in rented
quarters on Army posts, in rent
ed furnished homes while Mr.
Eisenhower was president of Co
lumbia university and head of
NATO forces in Paris and lastly
in the taxpayer-owned White
House.
The President drove to the
189-acre farm Friday afternoon
with his friend and personal
physician. Brig. Gen. Howard
Snyder. But Mrs. Eisenhower
and her mother arrived the day
previous.
Reporters and cameramen who
covered the Presidents' 85-mile
drive from Washington were
itoDDed at the gate about half
a mile down a tree-lined drive
way from the house.
All they could see from the
public highway was that the big
barn, once a faded red, has been
painted the pastel grey - green
the Eisenhowers decided on dur
ing an inspection trip a few
weeks ago.
Hagerty had served notice in
advance that the newsmen would
not get in. On earlier visits dur
ing the renovation period, they
had been permitted, to accomp
any Mr. Eisenhower on walks
outside the house and around
the barn while he inspected the
remodeling progress and his
small heard of aberdeen angus
cattle.
The President planned to re
turn to Washington this after
noon. He will be guest of honor
tonight at the annual dinner of
the White House News Photo
graphers association.
Students Here
Among students who have ar
rived home for spring vacation
from the various universities
and colleges are three who
came by plane Friday night.
They are from Oregon State
college at Corvallis and all are
freshman students. They are the
Misses Dixie Neathamer, 119
Jeanette street, Pat Newland,
1134 Morrow road, and Sara
Hart, 22 Glen Oak court. .
4
Use squares or waxed paper
for sifting and measuring when
baking. The paper can be dis
carded and you save on dish
washing.
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MEETING AT AMBASSADOR'S HOME, 12 American debutantes are given instruction on how to
conduct selves when presented to Britain's Queen Elizabeth II at Court of St. James' in London.
From left: Laura Haight, New York; Laura Handly, Lookout Mt., Tenn.; Patricia Lang, Se
attle; Julia Miller, Atlanta, Ga.; Pamela Painter, Los Angeles; Lettia Pearre, Baltimore, Md.; Mrs.
Winthrop Aldrich, wife of U. S. ambassador; Rinalda Van Brunt, San Antonio, Tex.; Mary Allen,
Pelham, N. Y.; Hope Canfield, New York; Sarah Coleman, Pebble Beach, Cal.; Natalie Fell, Jeri
cho, N. Y.; Dorothy Parish, New York. Presentations highlight the winter season. (International
Monday
12 noon Jackson County Re
publican Women, YMCA build
ing.
6:30 p.m. Lady Shriners,
Medford hotel.
8. p.m. Department of Ore
gon VFW auxiliary dance, Camp
White theater, bus at Trailways,
7:30 p.m.
8 p.m. Amethyst Rebekah
Friendship club, Mrs. Deloes
Walker, Gold Hill.
8 p.m. Olive Rebekah lod
ge, IOOF hall.
8 p.m. Tudor guild style
show, Tally-Ho dining room, Tal
ent. 8 p.m. Phoenix Community
club and Youth center, annual
meeting, at club.
Hour's Pay Buys
More Food Now,
Department Says
Washington U.R) You
are living better today than you
did 30 years ago, So says the
Department of Agriculture.
You do it by eating better
foods of far greater variety. And
these foods, the department says,
do not take any larger share of
your earnings than the less var
ied diet of the early 1920 s.
The department backed up its
statements today in a 44-page
pamphlet entitled "More and
Better Foods From Today's
Pay Check."
. The pamphlet shows with ap
propriate sketches that 30 years
ago one hour's take home pay
would buy 5Vi loaves of bread,
or IV2 pounds of chicken, or 2Vz
quarts of milk, or one dozen
oranges, or 3Vfc cans of tomatoes
This is a trifle to what the
sketch for 1955 shows. It says
an hourls take home pay will
buy 10 loaves of bread, or two
pounds of steak, or three pounds
of chicken, or seven quarts of
milk, or three dozen oranges, or
9Vi cans of tomatoes.
Egg Casserole Dish
New York (U.R) Try this
easy-to-fix egg casserole dish to
vary your meatless Lenten
meals.
You will need:
8 eggs, hard-cooked; V cup
butter; V teaspoon salt; 1 tea
spoon Worchestershire sauce;
teaspoon grated onion; 1 tea
spoon prepared mustard; 1 table
spoon of minced parsley; hot
cooked peas, green beans or
broccoli; 1 can (11 oz.) condens
ed cream or mushroom soup; Vi
teaspoon salt; Vi cup milk or
water or 1 cud shredded cheese
(V4 pound).
Cut eggs in half lengthwise
end remove the yolks. Cream
butter and yolk with Va tea-
spoon salt and other seasonings.
Fill each egg white with cream
ed mixture. Place in a shallow
buttered casserole. Arrange the
vegetable around the eggs. Com
bine the mushroom soup, tea
spoon of salt, milk. Heat and
pour over eggs and vegetables.
Sprinkle with cheese and heat
in a moderately hot oven (400
degrees) for 10 to 15 minutes,
or until the cheese is melted.
Gardenia
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Dept. 150-782
HOUSE OF WESLEY
R. R. No. I, Bloomington, HL
Print Name
ADDRESS
Tuesday
12:30 p.m. Jacksonville Re
bekah club, home of Mrs. Louis
Jones of the Applegate.
1 p.m. Howard Garden
club, home of Mrs. W. J. McCul-
loch.
6:30 p.m. Dinner for par
entes of mentally retarded child
ren at First Methodist church
dining hall.
7 p.m. Toastmistress club,
Eatons Dinner house.
7:30 p.m. SPEBSQSA, Room
B. YMCA building.
8 p.m. Medford Truth Cen
ter, Unity, Room 203, Holly thea
tre building.
8 p.m. DUV, courthouse.
8 p.m. Nevita Chapter, OES,
Central Point Masonic Temple.
8 p.m. Eagle Point Parent
Teacher association, high school
library.
8 p.m. American Legion
auxiliary, Legion home.
8 p.m. Pythian club, Girls
Community club.
Wednesday
10:30 a.m. Women's Mission
ary council, Medford Assembly
of God church, church annex.
12:30 p.m. Chapter AA, PEO,
Mrs. C. G. Van Valzah, 15 Ge
neva st.
6:45 p.m. Covered dish din
ner honoring First Christian
church choir, Fellowship hall.
8 p.m. Bow Bells chapter,
DBE, Girls Community club.
Thursday
12 noon First Christian
church Circles, 1, 2 and 4, Fel
lowship hall, potluck luncheon;
Circles 3 and 5 ,Mrs. William Pi
per, 590 Oakdale dr., potluck
luncheon.
12:30 p.m. Medford So
journers club, Medford hotel.
I p.m. First Christian church
Circle 6, Mrs. W. H. Holt, 18
Summit ave, dessert luncheon.
7 p.m. Talisman Rosebud
council, Pythian Sunshine Girls
Pythian building.
7:30 p.m. Lively Rogues
dance club, Ashland Elks club.
8 p.m. Reames chapter,
OES, Medford Masonic temple.
Friday
II a.m. Medford Truth cen
ter, Unity, Room 203, Holly
Theater building.
12:30 p.m. St. Mark's guild,
parish house.
1 p.m. Electra Social club,
Girls Community club.
mJjotn- ay f 323 EAST MAIN STREET ,
Rayon knit waist, tiered taffeta skirt with 3
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Colors white, blue & pink. Reg. $1.98 value
Sixth and Central
Coming Events
Are Announced
For Shady Cove
Shady Cove Several coming
events in the Shady Cove' area
were announced March 15 at a
meeting of the Shady Cove
Home Extension unit members
held at the home of Mrs. Carroll
Watson, Rogue River drive.
The first is a style show at
the Shady Cove gymnasium,
which the Parent-Teacher asso
ciation will sponsor March 26.
Unit members will sponsor a
card party March 28, beginning
with a 12:30 p.m. luncheon at
the Struthers home in Shady
Cove.
Textile painting instruction
will be offered for the unit wom
en March 30 at the Littlefield
home, and another workshop
will be held April 5, 6, and 7 at
the Duzenberry home for in
struction in making slip covers.
In the meantime a variety
show is planned by guild women
April 2 and will also be held at
the gymnasium.
A card party is announced for
April 21 which will benefit the
Lady of Fatima club. A 12:30
p.m. luncheon will be served.
During the March 15 meeting
the nominating committee re
ported on the Child Guidance
clinic. Mrs. Duzenberry spoke
regarding the safety program.
Mrs. Max Hawks and Mrs.
Ralph Lane gave the lesson con
cerning vegetables. The after
noon was devoted to program
planning.
The next unit meeting is set
for April 26 at the D. Larson
home, on Rogue River drive.
Phoenix
Phoenix The annual Commu
nity Club meeting for members
and f"snds
will be held Mon
21, at 8:00 o'clock
day, Lxarch
at the Community Club hall.
Main business of the meeting
will be election of officers for
the coming year. It will also be
decided at the meeting whether
the annual Festival is to be held
this year and when. Anyone in
terested is invited to attend the
meeting.
Next time you make parker
house rolls, try filling them with
grated cheese and chopped pars
ley. They go well with barbe
cued ribs.
Medford's Bargain Corner
More Adults Study Piano;
Liberace" Gets Some Credit
By GAY PAULEY
United Press Correspondent
New York (U.R) Let them
laugh when you sit down at the
piano.
Chances are they soon will
join you as part of the increas
ing number of grownups taking
music lessons like the kids.
The lesson business is boom
ing like the stock market, ac
cording to a spokesman for the
American Music Conference.
Those persons who rebelled at
study in childhood now wail,
"Why didn't mom make me
practice?" Then they hunt up a
music teacher, rent or buy a
piano or other instrument, and
start annoying the neighbors.
Why?
Well. We Hare A Yen
Part of it is to satisfy a secret
yen which Dr. John Clark Ken
del says all of us have to play
a musical instrument. And part
of it is the new approach to
learning it'i less painful than
in the days of finger exercises'
and more finger exercises.
Although all these adults now
banging out "The Blue Danube"
won't develop into Liberaces,
they will, add a lot of fun and
richness to their everyday life,
said Kendel, administrative
vice-president of the conference.
It is a non-profit organization
working to stimulate music ap
preciation and participation.
The piano is the favorite in
strument of these late-starters,
and perhaps Liberace should get
some of the credit.
"Certainly he's called a lot of
attention to it," said Kendel,
with a chuckle.
But the piano always has been
a favorite, he said, because it
provides harmony, melody and
accompaniment all at the same
time. And it's the easiest to
learn.
The conference estimated that
25,000,000 Americans, a record
number, now play some musical
instrument.
He Says All Should Plan
If Kendel has his way, even
tually all 165,000,000 of us will
toot a horn, strum a guitar, or
Varnished furniture can be
brightened with a "bath" of lin
seed oil solution. Use one quart
hot water, one tablespoon of tur
pentine and three tablespoons of
boiled linseed oil. Use a cloth,
wrung almost dry from the solu
tion, and be careful to keep the
moisture from the glued joints.
After careful washing and dry
ing, you can rub the surface to
a gleaming polish.
ft ft
I IRINnNlWWWfTfl
Sunday, March 20, 19S3
bang a piano.
"Any artistic expression is
good for the soul," said Kendel.
"Doesn't matter whether the
critics like you or not, it's the
satisfaction in performance
which counts."
"Otherwise," he said, "why
would there be a such world
wide chorus of bathroom singers.-"
t
Kendel formerly was music
We're all a -buzz with fashion
excitement! All the new Johan
sen Shoes for spring have just
arrived . . . bare, open sandals,
beautiful (and. beautiful fitting)
pumps, interesting new varia
tions on the spectator theme
. . . see them in polished calf
skin, in soft suede, in supple
kidskin . . . see the new slender
look of all of these shoes, their
stem-slim heels, both medium
and tall. Come see them all . . .
try them on and feel their won
derful Johansen fit . . . and
we think you'll be just as ex
cited as we are about all the
Johansen designs for Spring
1955! Don't forget . . . they're
here NOW!
Use your charge account or use
our convenient lay-away plan!
editor of the Rocky Mountain
News, for 28 years was director
of music education in Denver
schools, and was state super
visor of music and assistant sup
erintendent of public instruction
in music, in Michigan.
He is a pianist and his wife
and two daughters are accom
plished musicians.
A lot of boys rebelled at
music lessons because they once
were considered "for sissies,"
he said.
"When I started piano lessons,
I had to fight every kid in the
block," said Kendel.
ditferentl ffi ,)
liust
v5wf I arrived!
J4- 'i aff the new
AjJ for spring $
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10 a.m. te 9 p.m. y
Weekdays 8:30 a.m. to 10 p.m.
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