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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 7, 1955)
TWO MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE Thursday. April 7, 1953 Around Hollywood By ALINE MOSBT United Press Correspondent Hollywood (U.PJ A n i t a Ek berg figured today one reason why her movie career took more than two years to get off the ground: Holly w o o d tabbed her as a play girl. Anita is a long- legged, sultry blonde from Sweden. So far her film Aline Mosby career has con sisted of busty cheesecake photos and gossip column items about GRANGE An open meeting of the Upper Applegate Grange on March 26, drew attendance of many non grangers from the community, along with members from sev eral neighboring granges. State Deputy Roscoe Roberts and State Juvenile Supervisor Mrs. Willie McClean, were pres ent, also Rodney Keating, county judge, commissioners Shy Morth- land and Chester Wendt, County engineer, Paul Rynning and Mrs. Wattenburg, county construction supervisor. The information dealing with road improvement brought be fore the group by Judge Keating and his staff was of special in terest to those residing in this community. Keating stated that the county court administers ap proximately 1100 miles of county roads and 300 bridges, which in volves expenditure of a large amount of time and money in maintenance. He gave the planned program, some of which is already in prog ress, for this area, including com pletion of three new bridges and approaches thereto, widening of the Mule Hill grade, Brushy Hill grade and the Copper Store road in the upper river area. Oiling projects in portions not specified on the program for this year were believed impos sible, as the county court is not empowered to enlarge upon the agenda until further funds are appropriated. However, the court does provide a plan where in roads may be oiled as deemed necessary, so long as property holders bordering, are willing to assume 5 cents per linear foot from the total cost of 14 cents per linear foot. It was explained that the county would absorb 9 cents per foot of the expense for two years, thereafter the entire cost would be absorbed. Considering the long need and extensive logging traffic, resi dents of the Upper Applegate were gratified to hear of such vast improvements planned for their roads and expressed thanks to the county court. Community singing and vocal lumbers by Mrs. Eleanor Ram Jay and Menno Bachmann, ac companied at the piano by Ed mund Ramsey, were enjoyed during the evening. Refresh ments were served by the Grange ladies. x Visiting from other Granges were: Phoenix, Master Melvin Lottie, Mrs. Lottie and Mr. and Mrs. Arnold; Gold Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Quickenbush, Mr. and Mrs. Cook, Mr. and Mrs. Alva Walker and Mrs. Willie McClean; Eagle Point, Mr. and Mrs. Wattenburg; Roxy Ann, Mr. and Mrs. Rosco Roberts and L. G. Morthland; Central Point, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Wendt; Griffin Creek, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd McKee. her various suitors. She's lived in Hollywood since 1952 but until this year never worked. Meantime, she's been a familiar figure around night- club and in her white Jaguar sports car. In this gaudy town of non-serious playgirls, she ad mits, "This has not been good for me." "People think I'm just a play- girl, just joking around and not serious about my work," the ac tress said in her Swedish accent. Immigration Trouble "They see me around town for two years, not doing anything. They just don't know the rea son the don't know my trou ble with the immigration author ities. I did not have necessary papers to work for a year and I couldn't accept jobs. If I had, the immigration people would have sent me back to Sweden. "Winning that beauty contest hindered me, too." When Anita was sent to Holly wood to be a hostess at the Miss Universe contest, Universal-In ternational Studio signed her, After six workless months she left the studio. "People say I caused trouble and did not keep appointments, but they do not know I could not speak one word of English," she said indignantly. "I was able to stay here with out a job because my parents ar equite well off (in Malmo, Sweden) and I had money that I earned as Sweden's top high fashion model." Two Jobs Acquired Last fall at a cocktail party, producers Bob Fellows and John Wayne spotted Anita and, as she was at last able to work, signed her for their own company, Bat jac Productions. Anita was de glamourized with a shapeless outfit and no make-up for her first role as a Chinese refugee with blue eyes in "Blood Alley." But movie fans will have a look at the much-publicized Ekberg shape (39) in a new Martin and Lewis comedy, "Artists and Mod els." Anita is tall (5 ft., 7 in.) and has the high cheekbones and sloe eyes of a fashion model. She also has intelligence and a sultry air that should take her out of the cheesecake ranks into the true glamour girl category. "A beauty contest can make you familiar to the public but it hindered me more than any thing," she said. "A producer won't put you in a movie if you're more beautiful than the star. "You can get in a lot of trouble. - "If you want a good part, the producer knows youttave no ex perience. "Now I hope people change their minds about me because of the two roles I've gotten." Communion Service Scheduled This Evening A communion service, de signed to resemble and me morialize the last supper, will be held at 8 p.m. today in the Fel lowship hall of the First Meth odist church. Members of the congregation will gather by candlelight around two tables to receive communion. Dr. Raymond E. Balcomb, minister, and Dr. J. Thomas Dixon, assistant minis ter, will lead the service, assist ed by the chancel choir directed by Mrs. C. R. Adamson. "With Ready-to-Spread Cake Icing Even a Busy Woman has time to bake!" "Now rn burr woridoi i an like myself cm find lime to bake her owo oka since these new Towne Pride Butter Oeme Cake Icings he dene away with the fuss and bother of making cake icing says Mrs. Susan Van CI ere. busy execntrfe secretary. "Why, it's so easy to have a delicious creamy smooth cake king in just seconds! All you do is open the tin and -spread right oo the cake! I always keep both flavors on hand... Towne Pride Butter Oeme Chocolate and Towne Pride Butter Creme Vanilla 2 Delicious Buaer Creme Flavors Chocolate and Vanilla UewlOMEPRtoi Butler Creme Cake fangs Save Time, lute Better! You'll find that your calces will taste EVEN BETTER, when iced with deli cious, easy to use, ready to spread Towne Pride Butter Creme Cake Icings. They're ' so good and so creamy-smooth you'll wonder how you ever got along without them. No cooking! Nothing to be added! No muss or fuss just open the tin and they're ready to spread. Try them today and you'll find out why busy women ev erywhere axe using Towne Pride Butte Creme Cake Icings for the most tempting cakes they ever made. Twasmw BUTT! CRIMI CAKI ICINCS By Ifie makers of TOWNE fUDt Toppings and fruit Adu t ; jWL , " A YOUNG MAN'S FANCY It's spring, and the old say ing fits in the case of David Williams, IY2, as he busses Mimi Daniels, 3, through the back-yard fence at Memphis. David's father, a Memphis Commercial Appeal photog rapher, spotted the romantic goings-on and sneaked up behind them to make this unposed photo. As We Live Woman Advised To Seek More Congenial Friends Some people enjoy one thing, some another. When a person cannot enjoy being with a cer tain crowd, the best thing to do is to find new friends. (Q) "It seems that no matter where I go or whom I get to know, people all use vulgar language and like to tell dirty jokes. On Christmas I went to a party, never thinking the people would be like that. I came home in the middle 01 tne tun, dis gusted to thfhk that women would say such things in front of men. I belong to a church club and there are very nice ladies there. But this club meets just once a month, and I get lonely unless I see people and do things outside my home. What would you advise me to do?" (A) First, build up friendships with the women you have met at your rhuTh rub. Invite them to your home, or arrange to do things with them outside the home. If you get to know several of them well, they will in troduce you to their friends. In this way Dr. Hurlock By ELIZABETH HURLOCK, PH.D. you will broaden your circle of acquaintance and be able to asso ciate with people you find more congenial. Second, you must take into consideration your husband's in terests and his friends. If the people you have been associating with are friends or business asso ciates of his, you must learn to get along with them. It is a great handicap to a man in business to have a wife who refuses to take part in the social activities connected with his bus iness. You may not approve of these people, but you can be polite, agreeable, and tolerant when you are with them. If you have your personal friends to associate with, you will not find it so hard to be forced to associate, for business or other reasons, with people you find less congenial. (COPYRIGHT 1955. GENERAL FEATURES CORP.) SLOW AND QUICK Worcester, Mass (ll.R) The mills of justice grind slowly here So busy are the courts that nearly seven years elapsed be fore the automobile damage suit of Freeman vs. Fulginiti was called to trial. Then it was promptly settled out of court. Dead line for Sunday Classified is at noon Saturday. 5C FROM THE FAMOUS Xi Q$r M.C.P. KITCHEN LABORATORY JQ OQV-ppp j0C).j MUTUAL CITRUS PRODUCTS. -afrVOKcN IMAGINE! MAKING BERRY JAMS NOW ... WHEN IT'S NOT BERRY SEASON! JUST USE FROZEN BERRIES (strawberries or red raspberries) which are always available . . . and the won derful new uncooked jam recipes developed exclusively by dependable M.CP. JAM AND JELLY PECTIN! Ac tually, using frozen berries and these revolutionary M.CP. recipes is the most convenient and economical way to make berry jams ... for you can make them whenever you with, and get 13 big glasses for less than M a glass! Even with fresh berries in season you can't do better than that . . . and to buy the same amount of "store" jam you'll pay at least twice as much. M.CP. uncooked jams are the finest possible because you eliminate the usual cooking and boiling and thus pre serve ALL THE NATURAL FLAVOR AND COLOR! You'll find these marvelous recipes in every package of M.C.P. PECTIN (3Vi-oi.) ... and insist on M.CP. PECTIN no other pectin has these uncooked jam recipes! MAKE SPARKLING JELLIES NOW -OR ANYTIME -WITH BOTTLED FRUIT JUICE! YOU'LL ALWAYS FIND bottled grape and apple juice at your grocers . . . and, with them and M.CP. JAM AND JELLY PECTIN you can make as fine jelly as you ever tasted whenever you like. So easily and quickly, too, for there's no juice to be squeezed. This way, you need never be without delicious, economical jellies that can be turned out before you know it with M.CP. PECTIN'S dependable recipes (in every package). DO YOU COUNT YOUR CALORIES? Thtn You Need MX P. "LOW SUGAR" PECTIN . . lb first and only pectin ever developed for making jams, jellies, custards, pie fillings, etc, with lest, Unit, or no sugar at til! With it you can now make recipes that meet the exacting requirements of weight con trol diets, and the rigid sugar and starch restrictions of diabetic diets; or, simply your taste preference for things "less sweet than usual." M.CP. "LOW SUGAR" PECTIN is mot yet tvtilMt m stores, but IF YOU'D LIKE TO TRY IT . . . WITHOUT CHARGE ... fill out and aiail Coupon below for GENEROUS FREE SAMPLE. MUTUAL CITKUS PRODUCTS CO., Anohain, CalH. Y.i. I'd Ilk. to try M.CP. "LOW SUGAR" PKTfN. PImi t4 i the HEE SAMPUE you offer. (Mmm Print CWly) (TTN) NAME. AMIES . CITY. .ZONE. .STATE". NOTE: For convcfvtftca in mailing, cut eff Coupon and peile en 2c postcard. j2 Texan Moved From Baptists Editor's Note: The tallowing dis patch was written by the publisher of the Ravenna, O. Record and Courier Tribune, about a Texas radio station group owner. Both are members of a group of American editors and pub lishers who are touring Europe. by Reception Received in Moscow Church Rites By ROBERT C. DIX Written For United Press Moscow (Delayed) (U.R) One of our editors, Marshal Formby of Texas, found a common ground Sunday on which to com mune with the Russians serv ices at the Moscow Baptist Church. Formby, an outsized Texan with 245 pounds fairly well pro portioned around a large frame, had trouble keeping back the tears as he related his exper ience to me. . A Baptist from Plainview, Tex., he had learned a little about the work of his church in the Iron Curtain capital, so he set out to find it and to talk with the Rev. Jacob Fhidov, presi dent of the Baptist Union in Russia. A Touching Experience He found it just a five min ute taxi distance from the Krem lin and not only talked with the Protestant leader but made an address to the congregation, composed of more than 2,000 persons jammed into an audi torium area that ought not to hold more than 50. "Hearing the prayers and hymns of those people in Rus sia and then talking with them was about the most touching ex perience of my life," the big man said. Formby told the group, which hung on every word he uttered, that its effort was well known among American Baptists. He pointed out that "Christ had died for the sins of the peoples of all nations" and he urged them to have faith and to pray for friendship and peace in the world," "especially between our two great nations." The entire congregation waited until Formby left the pulpit and then, as he was walk ing out of the room, sang the hymn, "God Be With You Till We Meet Again," waving their Rogue River LIVESTOCK DISEASES Salem Livestock diseases re ported in March to the state vet erinarian at Salem included 1, 022 cases .on 251 farms and ranches, with 65 death losses. Shipping fever in cattle and ecthyma in sheep accounted for about half the cases in the 26 diseases reported. Infectious keratitis, at top of the list in the previous month, was down. Brucellosis was down with 79 reactors in 52 herds. Rogue River Mr. and Mrs. Fred Morgan and sons, Douglas, Dixon and David of Bishop, Calif., are spending Easter vaca tion here with Mr. Morgan's mother and brother, Mrs. Lois Morgan and son, Hurst. Woodville Cemetery associa tion will hold the annual meet ing at the Civic club rooms Sat urday, April 9, at 1:30 p.m. Mrs. Ralph Smith and chil dren Pat, Mike and Debra, left April 3 for Hickory, N.C. to visit her mother and other rela tives. They expect to spend a month in the south. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Milton and daughters of Wolf Creek were Rogue River visitors April 3. At Hope Presbyterian church Good Friday, April 8, at 7:30 p.m. the Bethany choir of 30 voices from Grants Pass will hold one hour of singing. Easter breakfast will be served at Fellowship hall after the sun rise services Easter morning. Mr. and Mrs. Frank West and sons of Evans Creek visited their daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Lee of Ontario, Ore., recently. handkerchiefs goodbye. There are 5,400 Baptist churches in Russia, the Baptist Union president told Formby, with a total membership of 512, 000. Last year, 10,000 new members were added. Of the Evangelistic churches, the Lutherans have the most members in Russia but the Bap tists are the most active. In Mos cow itself, the Baptists and the Adventists are the only active Protestant churches. An intourist interpreter ac companied Formby to the serv ice, an indication itself of the change in the government's atti tude on the religious question. Politics, of course, is not mentioned. Court Records POLICE COURT Robert G. Johnson, no operator's license, $5. Earl L. Sweek. failure to yield right or way, $10. Irvin C. Warren, violation of basic rule, $10. DISTRICT COURT Lowell C. Jaynes, no motor vehicle registration, $6. Richard E. Cox, no red flag on ex tended load, $6. Stephen L. Harris, no tail light, $6. Russell E. Stelle. overload, $177. Al's Market Fine Meats & Groceries CIRCUIT COURT Ruth Eliza Findlay vs. Robert Ed ward Findlay, divorce complaint. MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICATIONS James Edward Arnold, 23. route 2, box C, Jacksonville, and Dolly Dee Waggoner. 20, of 501 Fifth St.. Phoenix. SAVE MONEY! TRADE AT AL'S MARKET AND SAVEl WHY? We Pay No Rent We Do Our Own Work We don't Have to Mark Up Prices to Pay for Stamps We Grow Our Own Beef THAT'S WHY WE CAN SELL AT THESE LOW PRICES SPECIALS FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY O MEATS Good Quality O BEEF ROASTS . . lb. 33 RIB STEAKS . . . lb. 39' Ground Beef No Cereal lb. 27 BACON Dp7iTsd lb. 43 EGGS untFresh uOZ 51 No. 1 BANANAS 2 lbs. 29 bag0 CARROTS 2 bags W No. 2 Potatoes 50 lbs. 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