IMS11 I
Pythian Sisters
Elect Delegates;
Favorites Chosen
Pythian club will meet
Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Emilie Conrad, 632
Palm street.
Pythian Sisters held a short
Flag Day program Tuesday
prior to the meeting and ar
ranged by entertainment chair
man, Mrs. Polly Offutt.
Mrs. Don Ross was elected
grand representative, with
Mrs. Margaret Davis as alter
nate. Mrs. Edward fJostwlck
reported on the recent district
convention he?d at Bandon.
It) was voted to send Pic
Pak fders to supreme temple
for favors. It was also decided
to join with the Knight of
Pythias for a picnic, the date
to be announced later. Mem
bers are also reminded that
during the picnic a silent auc
tion will be held with pro
ceeds to be used for purchase-
of mattresses for the Pytnian
Home.
Several members were hon
ored by ft birthday party ar
ranged by Mrs. Ross ad Mrs.
Arnold Motschenbacher. Mrs.
Enola Hamilton, San Francis
co, was a special guest.
The refreshment committee
3br the evening was Mrs. Rosa
Young and Mrs. Davis. The
loce will recess during the
months of July and August,
with sessions to reconvene on
September 2 with a potluck
riinnpr to hp arranged by Mrs.
Delia Littlefield, Mrs. Bost-J
wick and Mrs. Rae Jack.
Past Chief's club of Pythian
Sisters met last Wednesday
evening at the home of Mrs.
Leffiy Cline. Members who
celebrated birthdays during
April, May and June were
honored. A prize was won by
Mrs. Mabel Nicholson.
Mrs. Davis and Mrs. Ida
Ireland were appointed to take
charge of a fund-raising pro
ject. Mrs. Harry Barneburg is
preparing a box to be sent to
the Pythian Home and desires
bath powder, bath towels or
similar articles.
Cards were played, with
prizes won by Mrs. Davis and
Mrs. Max Hawks. The next
meeting will be July 2 at, the
home of Mrs. Conrad for a 1
o'clock covered dish luncheon.
Sewing Sessions
To Be Held By
Baptist Women
White Cross Missionary cir
cles of the Women's Fellow-
TTiVcf Ttantist church.
SHif, -I- -
will meet Tuesday, June 24, to
sew and make bandages for
the missions. Day circles will
meet at 10:30 a.m. and those
attending are to bring a sack
lunch, scissors, and if they
have them, old seets for ban
dages and quilt pieces.
Mrs. Hazel Lester, 2346 Bid
die road, will be hostess to
Martha circle, with Mrs. Donn
Piatt as chairman; Ruth Circle
will meet with Mrs. Minnie
Albert, at 1003 West 11th st.
and Mrs. Dora Brantley is
chairman. Esther circle will
meet at the home of the chair
man, Mrs. N. A. Mead, 3471
Oak Pine way (Grant Acres);
and Nell Grubbs circle will
meet with the chairman, Mrs.
Clarence Wilson, Walden
Lane, Talent.
Mrs. John Clark, 605 Berry
dale, will be hostess to Eliza
beth circle; Mrs. Don Lind
strom is chairman. Mary cir
cle will meet again at the
Boyd SUine home, 953 Jasper
st to finish quilting; Mrs.
Douglas Lamb is chairman.
The evening circles, for
working women and mothers
unable to attend during the
day, will meet at 7:30 p.m.
and members are to bring
scissors, bandage and quilt
block material.
Hannah circle, with Mrs. R.
j Nordquist as chairman,
Will meet with Mrs. Hay Ste
phens, 653 South ivy st.; : M.
Keith Hockersmith will be
hostess to Lois circle at her
home at 3022 Madrona Lane,
t,i-.: wnnH is chairman.
Mrs. r-ivia "
Lydia circle will meet wnh
Mrs. Russeu uiu", r
mit ave., Mrs. Maynard Put
ney is chairman.
Butte Falls HEC
To Honor Greens
Butte' Falls - Plans for
the reception to honor Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Green on their
golden wedding anniversary
to be held at the Butte Falls
Community church, Sunday,
June 29 from two until four
p m , were made at the last
meeting of the Home Econ
STcU of the Butte Falls
Grange. The meeting w as
held at the home of Mrs. L.
Tsocial night of the grange
was held last evening at the
. v,r,i with an eve-
iSTot dancing and cards fol-
lowing tae amu.
At the last meeting a hand
kerchief shower honored Mrs.
.-j. iinro on her birtn-
Say. The next meeting of the
club will be held July 8. in
c. Jl. v Th next grange
tne city tai , , t
meeting will be July. 7 at
meeuiig auditorium.
"sS Committee for .
grange meeting win u
Rd Mrs. Ross Arant and Mr.
New officers for the , Oregon department, Disabled
American Veterans' auxiliary, were elected and installed
during the recent convention held in Medford. Posed here
at the time of installation are (front row, left to right)
Mrs. Grover Rawls, Medford. senior vice - commander;
Mrs. Lloyd DeLap, Klamath 'Falls, commander; Mrs. Clar
Trends in Food
Corvallis Consumers are
buying more food, paying
more for it, eating more meals
in restaurants, and enjoying
more marketing services than
ever before, according to Mrs.
Elvera Horrell, Oregon State
college economist.
Some of the reasons that
people are spending more for
food and services are explain
ed by Mrs. Horrell. Retail
food prices are up, she says,
because both farm prices and
marketing charges have in
creased in the past year. Peo
ple also have more money,
YOUR
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Outlined By OSC Home Economist
aro willing to spend more for
extra services, 'and enjoy the
luxury of eating more meals
in restaurants.
Although food costs are
higher today, people are
spending about a fourth of
their incomes for food, the
same as in other recent years.
However, Mrs. Horrell points
out, if shoppers bought only
the same amounts and types of
food as those bought in the
prewar years from 1935 to
1939, each person's food bill
would amount to only 16 per
cent of his disposable income.
I
Little or no-iron
baby-doll save 13!
1.99
Reg. 2.98. Crease-resistant !
Rose - print cotton batiste.
nylon overlay. S, M, L.
Save 13 ! Waltz gown,
carefree batiste!
Reg - 2.98. Crease-resistant !
Rose-print cotton batiste,
nylon overlay. 32 to 38.
. m
Save V?
C'85sn isiecli hrinf
-jv-mrum ww mm w
Regularly 3 for 1.17.
Cool knit rnvnn SMI
XL sizes 3 for 99c
al sis ror
ence Barlleli, Roseburg, junior vice-commander; (left to
right, back row) Mrs. George Simmons, Medford, conven
tion chairman; Mrs. Adelaide Grfssom. Central Point,
commander of Jackson County unit; Mrs. Hugh Farnham,
Forest Grove, chaplain and Mrs. Thomas Van Lanningham,
Oregon City, treasufer.
As incomes increase, people
usually buy more expensive
foods, and more convenience
in the form of processed, pre
pared foods.
A smaller share of food is
being produced at home nowa
days as people depend more
on store-purchased items, she
says. A department of agricul
ture survey shows that 18 per
cent of the food used was
home-produced in 1942, com
pared with only 8 per cent in
1955.
Behind higher retail food
prices are increases in both
- . jr f . ,
i V mtaS U i 5 . H 1 1 H 8 I I I III I I 55
f : . w u ) i u . i n w i i: . x mam m ... r- - x
fftjt Sale! Smarl laslex bathing suits ,3
r'WfrfffiW Save 2.98 and 3.98 in Wards big sale! Choose
I srl $ x3T1 from th newest styles in sleek acetate lastex fig- T Q U X
'
- iWHriftia i Sbm I
farm prices and marketing
charges is due mostly to the
higher cost of assembling,
processing and distributing
farm-food products.
HELP US!
We Need Clothing, Shoes,
Dishes, Furniture. We Pick Up.
HELP OTHERS!
The
Salvation Army
SPring 3-7335
FOR MOW'S
and WARD'S
Lodge to Confer
Esquire Rank;
Ceremonial Set
The rank of esquire will
be conferred Monday, June
23 by Talisman lodge,
Knights of Pythias; at 8 p.m.
Refreshments will follow.
The annual knight rank
ceremonial conducted by
Yreka lodge at the Pythian
Cave, 9 miles south Yreka,
Calif., will take place Satur
day, June 28. It will be pre
ceded by a banquet at 6:30
p.m., with the ceremonies at
8 p:m. DST.
These yearly affairs are
conducted by the light of a
full moon as it comes up over
Mt. Shasta, and is always at
tended by members and high
ranking officers of the west
coast state lodges of the or
der. About 15 members from
Medford as well as Grants
Pass and Roseburg Knights of
Pythias will attend, accord
ing to Joe W. Fritsch, past
chancellor and publicity
chairman of the local order.
The world's most expensive
sales talk
Door-to-door peddlers are now selling vitamin prepara
tions and nutritionaj supplements. Good for what ails you,
and all that. Here's the danger. You may buy the peddler's
vitamins "for what ails you" and postpone that visit to
your physician you were planning. And that can be
dangerous. Dangerous to your health your most precious
possession. That's why the door-to-door peddler's sales
talk can be expensive. Tragically expensive. For advice
on vitamins or nutritional supplements, see someone
with professional knowledge of such things your family
physician or pharmacist.
Physicians and Surgeon's
Pharmacy
Wainscott's Pharmacy
Central Drug
Gier's Pharmacy, Phoenix
Western Thrift
Medical Dental Pharmacy
r m.AMtnw.-- Mv-riw
THE TIME
THE PLACE!
exciting sun
cool, easy-care
Give your Summer wardrobe a pick-up right
now and save by shopping ot Wards I
Choose from a brand new collection of
dresses in drip-dry cottons, washable rayons
-ss
Plastic-Coated Eggs
May Be Oh Market
Madison, Wis. (UPI) -The
housewife soon may be stock
ing her refrigerator with plas
ticKioated eggs.
Flora Hanning and Marjie
Cox, home economists at the
University of Wisconsin, have
discovered that eggs dipped
in a plastic solution don't lose
weight, as the ordinary va
riety does, and don't get the
acid taste that comes from
storage in a warm place.
The two experimented with
150 fresh eggs and dipped
half of them in a solution of
chlorinated rubber, wax and
several chemical ingredients.
Then they stored all the eggs
in a warm room without tem
perature regulation.
After a week, the non-treated
eggs had a "rotten egg"
taste but the coated ones were
still fresh. And the old-fashioned
batch lost as much
weight in a week as the plas
tic coated eggs did in a month.
i
Heath's Pharmacy
Cash Davis Pharmacy
Foster's Pharmacy
Medford Pharmacy
McLain's Drug Centre
Hudson's Pharmacy
Central Point Pharmacy
Chris Drugs, Jacksonville
W55SOW srjps!ivismrryv WHOMW ' ; , ' ""MV""MW"'I" -v-mw.miiWt JU Uii"ui
illlili
dresses in
fabrics
. full-skirted styles, some cnemise sryies . . .
solids in smart darks or cool pastels plus
V plenty of colorful prints. Juniors, misses,
women s hair sizes.
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Sundiy, June 22, 19SS f A
T I' ST
k H- II.
mm
Stainless Steel Copper Bottom Cookwar
12-PIECE
Rgularly
$48.20 If
Purchased
Separately
r
SET INCLUDES:
1 Qt. Saucepan
wcover
3 Qt. Saucepan
, wcover
Fill your cooking needs for a lifetime with these
beautiful utensils. The stainless steel body cleans
in a flash with just soap and water. The thick
copper bottom spreads all the heat quickly, evenly
for delicious cooking. Exclusive "Vapor-Seal"
rims for perfect waterless cooking, self-nesting
covers and stay-cool hang-up handles are just a.
few of the many features that make this Ekcoware
sale the cookware buy of a lifetime. .
mm
SPECIALISTS IN HOME WARES!
245 South Central at 10th , Phone SP 2-5201
LOADS OF FREE PARKING 0
A fitji tr tt ft t,t ettd,, "St ttrify ww.,, , , ' , ,
SALE
Men's T-shirt price
slashed 30-save!
3 for 2.25
Reg. 3 for 3.25. Long-tail T-shirts.Nylonreinforcedneck-bands
won't sag, stretch.
SALt
13 OFF! Men's superb
summer sport shirts
1.99
Reg. 2.98 Celaperm and
cotton short sleeve styles
are 100 washable. Save !
SALE
children's skips
sturdy fabric
1.43
Reg. 2.98 Army Duck
r-- . t,u
ri Sizes 8Vj-12.
12Vi-3. Red or . blue.
1 '
maurn1
SIFT SET
2 Qt. Bouble Boiler
4U Qt. Dutch Oven
tr trivet, cover
10" SfcU wcover ,
QUALITY AT
LOWEST. PRICES
'tvtMtor-&
K
V
-
N0W$(p)v5
ONLY Zjl 4
km
.4
'ffiy .1
and Mrs. Hugo. w-.