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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 6, 1957)
o o TWO M-DFCHD MAIL TRIBUNE Wednesday, Not. 8, 1917 . Luncheon Given - By DAR Chapter; 4 Projects Named A bridee - luncheon, held Wednesday. October 30 at the home of Mrs. Glenn O. Taylor, 1334 Reddy avenue, Medford. was the second in a series of parties being given by Crater Lake chapter. Daughters of the American Revolution. Hostesses were Mrs. Glenn O. Taylor. Mrs. Earl C. Bradfish. Mrs. O. H. Brenneman, and Mrs. George R. Carter. Prizes were won by f rs. H. F. Nordwick, Mrs. Harris B. Janes, Mrs. Knute Froysaa. Mrs. E. N. Eldridge and Mrs. Robert Simp son. The money raised is to be used for the many patriotic services being sponsored by the Daugh ters of the American Revoluti&i. The DAR supports, entirely, two schools for under-privileged chil dren, and assists several other schools. The group also provides an annual scholarship lor some student in occupational therapy, to aid polio and other paralytic victims. Crater Lake chapter also spends much money in Oregon, and in Jackson county, helping to restore and memorialize his toric spots. Another project is sponsorship of "Good Citizenship Girls" from the standard high schools of the county. The chapter promotes the study and appreciation of history in the local schools, and furn ishes manuals to all new citi zens. For many years citizenship classes have been coached by a Crater Lake chapter member, Mrs. G. Q. D'Albini. The chapter tries to bring cheer to the children in the Che mawa Indian school and also helps the Celilo Indians. Oven Fried Fish For oven-fried fish, preheat the oven to 425 degrees. While It is preheating, dip the fish fil lets into milk, then roll in sea soned bread crumbs and place side by side in oiled shallow bak ing dish. Brush the fillets with bacon fat or melted butter and cook 15 to 20 minutes or until golden, brown. Trout, cod, red snapper, pike, perch and white Qfish may be cooked in this way. HAPPY mo;ditai ityi V No matter what your Thanksgiving Needs may be . . . you'll find that ACME HARWARE is ready to serve you with a complete line of top quality Housewares and Appliances! We've all the finest Preparing . . . Serving . . and Decorat ing items and all at the lowest prices around! So, for the happiest Feast ever . . . fill all your Thanksgiving Needs at ACME your Headquarters for Holiday Hospitalityl 5-plca Rooston st In mogn.thwf holder, with guaranteed sharp "froien heat" blades. $14.95 STAINLESS TABLE SILVERWARE 7 95 Serves 4 30 piece, long life staainless steel ware. Packed in attractive storage box. Choice of patterns. See it at Acme today! SPECIALISTS IN Free Parking Auxiliary Holds i Halloween Party Crater Lions auxiliary enter tained husbands of members at a Halloween progressive dinner party. Hot apple cider was served at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Dwyer, 839 South Riverside ave nue, and salad at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Jack Ingram, 914 Queen Ave avenue. Main course of the dinner was served at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dave Irving, 2103 Hillcrest road, and the daily decorated home of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Eastwood, 940 Shafer lane, was the last stop. Dessert was served and the group bobbed for apples and played Halloween games. Social chairman for the aux iliary is Mrs. Murray Dumas. The auxiliary held the month ly meeting last night at the home of Mrs. Clifford McGinty, 2110 Whittle road, with Mrs. Earl Richardsan, Mrs. Paul Shafer and Mrs. McGinty as hostesses. Eagle Point HEC kMames Committees For Coming Events Eagle Point Plans for coming events were made at a meeting of Eagle Point Home Economics club, held at the home of Mrs. Nevah Cliffords. Mrs. Ethel Coy and Mrs. Ray Harnish were co hosteses. Mrs. Jake Brown presided. Plans were made for a table of fancy work at a pie social to be given November 16 at the Eagle Point Grange hall, and commit tees were appointed for a dinner to be given December 8 at the hall. The dinner will raise money for Grange projects. Results of the canning contest and other material from the re cent Pomona Grange meeting were reported by Mrs. Lester Wertz. A program of songs, reading and quizes led by Mrs. Wertz closed the meeting. Guests at the meeting were Mrs. Ivan Hatfield, Mrs. Vivian McLean, Mrs. Mae Morrison and Mrs. T. W. Ostrander. The next meeting of the group will be November 27 at the home of Mrs. Otis Jones. ALUMINUM ROASTER $2 98 up Efficient aluminum roaster large enough for 5-lb. fowl or 7-lb. roast. Bright polished fnish. ROAST $1.98 to $3.75 Sharply pointed rod to put into roasts, etc. Dial tis marked for meat cooking temperatures. CARVING SET $4 95 up Budget-priced Carving Set ... will give years of service. 8" stainless steel blade carver knife. 6V fork and 8'i" sharpening steel. Assorted handles. QUALITY At Lowest Prices HOMEWARES! Free Delivery -yi fw.il ' ' Kit i M LEANING OVER infant daughter born Aug. 6, Producer Mike Todd is all tenderness as he gazes at sleeping baby held by mother, Actress Elizabeth Taylor. First "at home" ' picture of baby was made in Westport, Conn. (International) Pitpoiiniripn This week's calendar looks like the first of December, Instead of the first of November. Tuesday was the Methodist's annual bazaar; tonight and Thursday the Junior Service league is pre senting the annual Follies, a benefit for the kindergarten for deaf children: Thursday nisht Baron de Meiss-Teuffen sneaks for Knife and Fork club in Medford Fork in Ashland; Tudor guild, assisted by Ashland Garden club and Beta Sigma Phi sorority, is sponsoring a big bazaar in the Knox building in Ashland; Saturday afternoon Medford League of Women Voters is giving a Founders' tea in the new Red Cross building and Saturday evening the European dancers, Nora Kovach and Istvan Rabovsky, present the first program of the season for Jackson County Civic Both the Junior Service league few members, but they make up hard. The Service league gals are Follies will be particularly good they need money for operating hearing children, but are faced with the problem of finding new quarters, since the present building in the housing project is to be torn down. Tudor guild supports the Oregon Shakespearean festival, mainly by supplying scholarships for actors and technicians who must pay their own transportation to Ashland and their own living expenses during the season. Organized in 1950 by Dr. Mar gery Bailey of Stanford university and Mrs. I. E. Schuler, Medford, the guild at first supplied only one or two scholarships. For the 1957 season, this organization of 42 women provided five scholar ships of $225 each; next season it has been decided this must be increased to $250. The guild's best known money-raising event "is the annual Bard's Heyday, given each year shortly before the opening of the festival, and they also have sponsored booths where articles are sold during the play season, have given dinners, style shows and dances. Like the Junior Service league, Tudor guild is now faced with the task of helping to raise a building fund, for the old Elizabethan theater in Ashland is now completely inadequate and must be replaced. A letter from the Army wife in Berlin, whose interest in Shakespeare stems from the Ashland festival, describes a Shake spearean recital by the noted English actor, Sir John Gielgud. She wrote: "The night of October 6 we had a very interesting experience. About four o'clock in the afternoon fortune, in the form of a service club hostess, dropped two tickets in my lap for the John Gielgud recital that night. We had tried to get tickets through the agency at BC (Headquarters Berlin Command) but hadn't been able to get them. "It turned out that the lecture was being given in an apart ment of an old palace in the French sector. The audience was seated in two long narrow rooms "There was a raised platform at one end of the larger room. We sat at the other end of this main room. It was difficult for us to see Sir John, but we had no trouble hearing him. The room was lighted entirely by candles, which were set in four massive crystal chandeliers, and in candelabra along the walls and on the platform. "The walls consisted of heavy oak paneling, elaborately carved, with oil paintings set into alternate panels. "The recital consisted of selections from Shakespeare's plays and sonnets, loosely linked by a commentary by the speaker. We enjoyed it very much, but I was disappointed because he read none of Falstaff. The whole thing, including transportation, cost us about $2. "We have been unable to see as many concerts as we would like because the band has been extremely busy. Also, the CO has a bad habit of announcing jobs a day or so before they are to be played, when he has known about them well in advance, some times for as long as three weeks. He informed the men when they protested once, that they had no right to buy tickets for concerts in advance because they must never assume that they might have an evening free. That one time the boys figure that as a group they had lost about $50 in ticket money because it was too late to turn them back. "The weather here has been cold and damp for the most part, with only a few days of nice fall weather. I am very glad that I stocked up on knee-length stockings before I left New York." If you're having trouble grasping the significance of Sputnik I and Sputnik II, and the idea that the Russians may land a missile on the moon, take another deep breath and read this. A Dutch professor has developed an artificial mathematical formula lan guage which, if broadcast into space, will enable man to exchange knowledge with intelligent life what a release says which came Netherlands Information Service The professor, Dr. Hans Freudenthal, announces that his new language is based on radio signals of varying duration and wave length, which could be received ers, whatever kind of language they may speak. He named it "lingua cosmica" or cosmic language, and because everyone is in a hurry these days, he contracted it to "lincos." Dr. Freudenthal is quick to point out, however, that there will be no double talk or back chat in lincos; it is only intended for theoretical use. He has completed chapters on mathematics, time measure ments and mechanics, is now working on human behavior and other fields. You don't understand? Well, we don't either. O.S. F.W. WOOLWORTH CO. 39 North Central Medford, Oregon NOW AT YOUR WOOLWORTH STORE FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY! Sewing Machine Attachments k Beautiful embroidery work and trims -k Button-holing "V Braiding :V P"H hems it Applique it Darning k Saves time k Fits any make machine. Seeing is believing. Come in and see. and Friday night for Knife and Music. and Tudor guild have relatively for their size by working extra hoping that the turnout for the this year, because not only do the kindergarten for hard-of- connected by a wide door. in outer space. Anyhow, that's to Potpourri last week from the office. and worked out by space swell- $1159 CALENDAR Calendar - nonces mo nowi ior the society section of The Mail T-lbune must be submitted in writing "id deadline for the Sun day edition la 1 pm Friday Dead line for the weekly calendar is 9 m of the day of oublication a no' for week day news is 5 pjn. the day before publication. Wednesday: 7:30 p.m. Bethel 14, Job's Daughters, Masonic temple. 8 p.m. Past Chiefs club, with Mrs John Russell, 120 New town st. 8 p.m. Xi Mu Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi, home of Miss Anna May, 1810 Orchard Home court. Thursday! 10:45 a.m. Westside Ex tension unit, grange hall, Cen tral Point. 12 noon Jackson county unit of Oregon State college Mothers' club, Rogue Valley Country club. 12 noon Zonta club, Jackson hotel. 12:30 p.m. Sojourner's Girls Community club. . 12:30 p.m. Wenonah club, card party at Redman hall. 2 p.m. Sams Valley Ladies club, home of Mrs. Sadie Cy pherson, Sams Valley rd. 2:45 p.m. Phoenix PTA, grade school gymnasium. ( Scientist Studies Interdependence Of Food Nutrients Washington, D.C. Nutrients in food are interdependent, ac cording to Dr. Barnett Sure, re porting in "Modern Nutrition in Health and Disease." According to Dr. Sure,' some nutrients can not be used by the body without the presence of certain others and some are more effective in combination with certain others, than alone. He gives as an example of this interdependence of foods the fact that a deficiency of vitamin A may result also in symptoms and damage associated with de ficiency of vitamin C, ascorbic acid. Scurvy, a viamin C defi ciency disease, has been pro duced in animals by cutting off their supply of vitamin A. It's like turning off the beer tap only to find that the wine has also stopped flowing, the report states. The study showed that inter relationships exist not only among the minerals; between vitamins and minerals: between vitamins and proteins; 'between vitamins and carbohydrates and between vitamins and fats. Mul tiple relationships also exist, it is believed. The inter-action of nutrients is the subject of much current re search. The field of study is rela tively new, but results are suf ficiently definite to show that it is not safe to neglect any of the main classes of foods, such as milk and its products, fruits and vegetables, meat and similar foods and cereals. Information for mothers-to-be is given in Dr. Mario Castallo's new book, "Getting Ready for Parenthood,' which can be ob tained at the Medford Public Library. The author describes each step of the way from the earliest signs of pregnancy to care of the baby when he comes home. .4rVB.1 ; 1 1 V Main and Bartlett Streets Civil Defense Addresses Hospital Group General Joseph Hicks, Jack son county civil defense direc tor, spoke to members and guests of Rogue Valley Memo rial Hospital auxiliary at the an nual fall meeting of the group Friday afternoon in the hospi tal penthouse. General Hicks stressed the importance of rec ognizing the possibility of enemy attack at any time in the future, and the necessity for taking pre cautionary steps for survival. Public apathy is the greatest problem in civil defense plans, the speaker added. Every family should keep a supply of bottled water and canned food on hand which would permit everyone to take shelter and remain indoors for two or three days in the event of radioactive "fall-out" in the area, the general said. On display at the meeting was a radio receiver and transmitter unit recently purchased by the auxiliary for use in the event of any disaster in this area. The hospital administrator, Miss B. J. Larsen, stated that the radio will be used not only for civil defense purposes but for such local emergencies as floods, fires, or other "disasters" which would make regular communi cation facilities inadequate. Vol unteers who might be interested in learning to operate the radio are asked to contact Mrs. Ed ward P. Barnett, vice president of the auxiliary. Mrs. George W. Pitts, presi dent, read the annual report showing activities of the auxil iary during the past year. The group has a membership of 86 volunteers, of which 57 are ac tive, 26 inactive, and 3 associ ate members. The auxiliary is composed of three services; the "hospital services with five committee; which contributed 16421 hours of work; the "staff service" with 10 committees which gave 1440 hours of volunteer time; and the "outlying chapter groups" which gave 137 hours working on special projects Olsens Operate Art Glow Studio At Berry Farm Dr. and Mrs. Paul Olsen, who operated The Rock Mart and En chanted Grotto near Shady Cove for a number of years, are now operating the Art Glow studio at Knotts Berry Farm, Santa Ana, Calif. Mrs. Olsen noted in a letter that Knotts Berry farm, recently the subject of an article in the American Mercury which was condensed for. Readers' Digest, employs about 800 men and women the year round, and about 1000 in the summer time. The Art Glow studio was start ed 16 years ago by the artist, Paul von Kleiben, who did many of the paintings in buildings at the Farm. The Olsens opened for business October 1 after a small amount of remodeling and plan to later incorporate features which they used in Jhe Shady Cove store. Mrs. Olsen wrote that visitors to the Farm average about 3, 000,000 a year. slespweai... BY (Left) Drifting peignoir of nylon tricot float ing from a yoke with frilled rows of fine Val lace which also cuff the sleeves. Si2es small, medium and large in black, American Beauty or Mint. Peignoir ... . 8.98 Gown . ... . 5.98 (Right) Accent - on - sweetness short - shorty blends row-upon-row of delicious Val lace, creamy nylon tricot and sher bety chiffon. Sires small, medium and large in mint, pink, black and American Beauty. AWAY YOUR CHRISTMAS GIFTS NOWI Park FREE at the Riverside" Parking Area While Shopping Herel Director Individual groups included in the hospital services are those whose members arrange flowers and deliver mail, women who assist in feeding patients, a group operating a hospitality cart; a surgical supplies group and a sewing group. Anyone in terested in the hospital is invited to join the auxiliary, and infor mation about any of the services may be obtained by contacting Mrs. Pitts and Mrs. Barnett. Two outlying chapters are currently continuing with proj ects, according to the report. Memebrs of St. Martin's guild at Shady Cove are making scuff slippers for patients, and St. Martha's guild at Prospect pro vides pinkee puppets" for all patients in the children's ward. The Colony club has taken on a special project of making 25 oxy gen tent heods, which were de signed by Mrs. Bernice W. Nims, director of nurses. Two new committees have been added this year, Mrs. Pitts reports. The "administrative group" helps with clerical work for the auxiliary and hospital. The "advisory committee for the gift shop and snack bar" will work with the hospital concern ing this new project which will be initiated when the new build ing is occupied next spring. At the conclusion of the meet ing, refreshments were served by the sewing group. - Jefferson Chorus To Sing for PTA The Jefferson school chorus under the direction of Mrs. Del la Weber will be heard at a meeting Friday of Jefferson Parent-Teacher association, it was announced today by Mrs. John Kent, president. Classes will be dismissed at 2 p.m. and teachers will remain in their rooms until 2:30 when the regular business meeting con venes in the cafeteria. This 30 minute period is reserved for conferences with individual teachers, and parents are urged to take advantage of the oppor tunity to discuss any problems or questions. ' A nursery for pre-school age children is maintained during the meeting, under supervision of Girl Scouts. Fee for this serv ice is 10 cents per child. School age children are supervised on the playground without charge. Mothers of children In Robert Phillip's sixth grade home room, and Mrs. Clara Goldin's special room will be hostesses for the coffee hour following the meet ing. LOOK your Loveliest Virginias BIG Y BEAUTY SALON Jim Funk, Lillian Lewis, Virginia Welch, Owner & Operator PHONE SP 2-9380 So practical ! Flower arrangements will be more effective if fitted to the room spaces they occupy. Large, stream-lined pieces of furniture and lots of wall space call for equally large floral decorations. Storage Problems? CALL DAVIS! DAVIS offers the most modern storage facilities in Southern Ore gon. Low rates, too. Household, or Commercial storage DAVIS can solve your problem. Fast crating and packing is another DAVIS service. Call DAVIS for additional information. 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