Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, May 14, 1963, Image 8

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Medford Trail Blderi events uiually are family- affairs.
Parents take lhair children, and often grandparent! and
their grandchildren Join in riding horseback and other ac
tivities. Shown above is a group of members' children just
after they boarded the stagecoach for a ride through Jack
sonville during a recent breakfast sponsored by the riders
Initiation Set
By Amaranth
Roxy Ann court, Order of
Amaranth, will hold Initiation
and a memorial service at a
stated meeting Set for Thurs
day, May M, In Medford Ma
sonic temple. '
Mr. and Mrs. Hat Bishop,
royal matron and patron, In
vited all local and Visiting
members to attond. ,
A number of local members
have been attending installa
tions held In various Cities of
Oregon, and; also attended
Siskiyou court, Yrcka, Calif.,
'April 27, for -installation. .
At the last meeting of Roxy
Ann court; an addendum was.
given in honor of the junior
past royal matron and patron,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard May
field. . A new court was organized
and constituted in Lake Os
wego, Ore., Sunday, May S,
and will be known as Waluga
court.
for Your Convenience & Savings Big Double load Washari
i AiikirtDnjiAAT ...... .
itnflwymu.uSlllTH
TVeelcly
I FOUND THE
i last -Sa-V
r
LOST IN THE YUKON
t by Churk Hnmillon
Here is the incredible story of a preacher and
young woman lost in the Yukon wilderness for
50 days as told by the man who heard it first
tho bush pilot who rescued them. -
. Read this inspiring story of faith in the
MAY 19TH Weekend Issue , !
with your copy of the
Mewrd
TUESDAY. MAY 14. 11163
J
' . t- i1-
West Side School Plans
Hobby Show
West Side School Mothers'
club announced and reviewed
year end activities at the May
meeting, held in the school
cafeteria. ,
Climaxing the school year
will be the annual hobby show
Friday, May 17. Co-chairmen
of this event are Mrs. Henry
Moyer and Mrs. C. D. Ken
dall, It will be at the school
from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. and
both students and adults are
Invited to enter hobby dis
plays. Food will bo sold, and
money earned frpm this proj
ect will bo used to buy books
for the school library.
Entries for the show may
be taken to the school any
time Friday, it is stated.
Durlne the meeting Mrs.
Vinson H. Vaughan, chairman
of the recent' benefit luncheon
and card party for the school s
.jiiwart
EXCLUSIVE
.
GIRL
tHTRIBUNE
ink.'
lZE ' z .fit. JSX
in Pioneer village. The drivers
ford, and Jerry Baldwin, Jacksonville. The mules are Fibber
and Molly, which their owner,
country in 1959 from Missouri
gon's Centennial anniversary. '-
For Friday
foster child, announced that
the party was very successful.
More than 100 women attend'
ed.
Mrs. Hanlcy Heffcrnan pre
scnted two lilac bushes to the
school in memory of Mrs. Wal
lace Haskins, a past principal.
These were accepted for the
school by the student body of
ficers.
The school will again oper
ate a summer lending library.
Summer hours during which
children may check books out
will be announced. Mrs. John
Flccger is chairman of this
project.
May 9 a pre-school tea spon
sored by the Mothers' club
provided an opportunity for
prospective first-grade pupils
and their mothers to visit the
primary room and meet the
teacher. Mrs. Gary Adkins
was chairman of the after
noon's activities.
Mrs. Ellis Chartlcr, presi
dent, presented corsages to
women who will serve as of
ficers of the club the coming
year. I hey are Mrs. Vaughan,
president; Mrs. Ralph Monroe,
vice-president; Mrs. W. A. Sa-
Inde, secretary, and Mrs.
Frank Vevera, treasurer.
CFG Association
Holds Meeting
t aient-At the last meeting
of the Talent-Phoenix Camp
Fire Leaders' association, held
at the home of Clark W.
Brown Jr., Mr. Brown spoke
about the camp facilities at
Camp KaEsta Applcgate, at
Lake of the Woods.
The camp will be leased
from the Klamath Falls Camp
Fire Girls council for the last
two weeks in August for the
Rogue Camp Fire Girl coun
cil. He noted that reservations
are nearly filled for both ses
sions. Yaicwahnoah at Wagner
Creek Forks will soon be
available for Camp Fire Girl
use. Camp dates have been
set for June 22 to June 31.
It is stated that girls in the
Talent area have first choice,
but that girls from other areas
will be accepted if there is
room.
Plans were completed for a
grand council fire to be held
Friday, May 17, at 8 p.m. in
the Phoenix Community hall.
Leaders of the Horizon club
and Junior High school group
were reminded of the council
wide swimming party Satur
day at Jackson Hot Springs
The seventh grade junior
high school Campfire Girls
are planting flowers and
slirubs in front of the Talent
City hall as part of their pub
lic service projects for the
year. Fifteen girls and three
leaders recently spent an aft
ernoon working on the proj
ect.
Lodg'6'To Attend
Church Service
Yrcka - Members of Aurora
temple. Pythian Sisters, will
attend church In a body Sun
day, May t. Members are
asked to meet at Yrcka
Methodist church at 10:4S a.m.
May 15 the Sisters will pre
pare and serve a dinner for
the Knights.
During the last meeting of
the temple, the charter was
draped ill memory of Mrs. O
J. Cox, long-time member
whose funeral had been held
that afternoon.
Milk Care
Milk should be kept cold-
covered-clean, and away from
sunngnt. Refrigerate milk as
soon as it arrives In the home.
Replacing the cover on the
milk tightly after use pre
vents absorption of atreng
odors and flavors from other
goods and assures a sweet
and refreshing tasting bever
age
are Kermon Kennedy. Med
George McUne, drove across
to Oregon, to observe Ore
Italy Observes
Anniversary of
Roman Specialty
By ELVEZIO BIANCHI .
Rome-flJPU-Citizens of Rome
this, year celebrate the cen
tennial of a gastronomic spe
ciality that has a formula like
chemical products.
The specialty is known as
"Spaghetti A 1 1-Amatriciana."
Millions of tourists have
tasted and adopted it, just as
Ramans did 100 years ago.
Rome' gastronomy books de
scribe the dish as the greatest
kitchen elaboration of the
traditional spaghetti dish since
Marco Polo introduced it to
Italy from China more than
a thounsand years ago.
One of the most Interest
ing aspects of Italy is that
every region, more or less
corresponding to the multi
racial ancient settlements in
the country, has different
ethnical cultural, linguistic
and gastronomic features.
Pasta Changes
Since Marco Polo got back
from his wanderings in the
Far East, the original brand
of the long strings of pasta
underwent innumerable
changes to fit regional tastes.
The men who ponder the
pans and furnaces invented
hundreds of recipes to dress
them. Some of these recipes
have become the gastronomic
symbol of regional palates.
This is the case of the
Spaghetti All Amatrlciana,"
which is the gastronomic sym
bol of Rome.
The gastronomic formula of
the "Spaghetti AU-Amatricia-
la is Pa. It stands for
"pasta," pomodoro, pecorino,
pancetta, peperoncino-or spa
ghetti, tomatoes, sheep cheese,
bacon and hot peppers.
Calories
The flavor of spaghetti AH
Amatriciana is rude, akin to
the nature of mountain shep
herds who invented it. It is
a dish rich of calories, made
for men who used to brave
the cold nights of the Appen-
nine mountains with their
flocks.
One hundred years ago
Rome was still a city of 300,
000 living inside the old his
torical walls of the Eternal
City.
Out of the walls to the
south was, and still partially
is, the ancient Appian way,
stretching across an undulate
plain rich of tender grass In
the winter.
Here came the Abruzzi
mountaineers to pasture their
flocks and to trade their
strong piquant pecorino
cheese. Romans got acquaint
ed with the spaghetti All-
Amatrlciana through the shep
herds.
The rude dish was like the
Trojan horse. In no time it
penetrated into the old city
and initiated 1 1 s triumphal
march. Soon "Amatriciana
restaurants mushroomed in
every section of the city.
Today there is hardly
street in the old sections of
Rome without an "Amatric
iana" restaurant.
.
Party Planned
By Hoedowners
Derby - Derby Hoedown
ers plan a graduation party
for a beginners' class which
recently completed training
It is set for. tonight at 8
o'clock in Derby Community
hall. Edwin Cavin and guests
will call and all square danc
ers and callers are Invited.
Refreshments will be pot
luck style.
Teaching Machine
An Inexpensive teaching
machine, sold In supermarkets
helps elementary school stu
dents to bone up on English,
grammer, general science,
U.S. history, geography.' spel
ling, arithmetic, and foreign
language. (Universal Electron
ics Laboratories Corp., Hack
ensack, N J ).
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON
Women's News
Broadway League Opens
Membership
A group of about 50 women
are working this week on the
annual mem bership enroll
ment of the Medford Broad
way Theater league. The en
rollment drive will continue
throughout the week.
borne 30 of the women
workers were entertained at
the home of Mrs. B. D. Mit
chell, 33 Black Oak drive,
yesterday for coffee and to
meet Charles Winter, repre
sentative of the United Per
forming Artists, New York
City, here to advise the Med
ford league.
Mr. Winter spoke of the
three plays booked for next
season, "The Sound of Music,
"Take Her - She's Mine" and
"A Man for All Seasons." He
pointed out that all three of
these plays have been Broad
way hits, and added that the
first- and last are unusually
fine plays, both with a con
siderable religious theme and
that they complement one
another nicely for a season.
Six Women
At Meeting
Six women from Jackson
county are in Portland for the
biennial convention of the
League of Women Voters of
Oregon.- They include Mrs.
Ogderi Kellogg, Gold Hill,
president of the , Medford
League; Mrs. Irving Lord,
president of the A s h land
League; Mrs. Curtis Hopkins
and Mrs. Robert Walker, Cen
tral Point; Mrs. A. H. Schme-
chel and Mrs. Dunbar Carpen
ter, Medford., Mrs. Carpenter
is a member of the board of
directors of the Oregon
League. ...
The convention, which is
being held at the Sheraton-
Portland hotel, will end
Wednesday. Speakers include
former Oregon governor Rob
ert Holmes, State Representa
tive John Dellenback and Sen
ator Walter Pearson, chair
men of the House and Senate
Constitutional Revision com
mittees; Lewis Crutcher,
architect; State Representa
tive Shirley Field; a Washing
ton county commissioner, Mrs.
Richard Wilcox; and Eugene
City Councilwoman Mrs. Gus
tav Lauris.
A major part of the League
convention program is con
cerned with selection of items
which the non-partisan wom
en's group will study the com
ing two years.
was
mm
TO:::
Wrap your family in a blanket of warmth
as clean and pure as a June day on a moun
tain top.
A simple piece of wire eliminates furnaces,
flues, pipes, fuel tanks, fire . . . leaves your
home free of fumes, odors, messy flame by
products ....
Wire your modern home for- comfort, con
venience, safety. Install electric heat.. Set the
thermostat to the temperature vour family
' enjoys. Forget it.
Once installed, you'll hardly know;.it's there.
t
Enrollment
The first concerns the famous
Trapp family of music fame,
and the last is based on the
life of Sir Thomas More.
Clergymen have been espec
ially interested in this drama,
he stated.
"Take Her - She's Mine" is
a family comedy story. A
fourth play will be chosen
later.
Mr. Winter stated that Med
ford is the smallest city to
have the Broadway Theater
league plays, and the Holly
theater the smallest house in
which the troupes perform
However, he said that the lo
cal Broadway Theater league
is in many ways "better" than
those in larger cities.
Headquarters for the league
has been established at Rogue
gallery, 220 West Main street
and the office will be open
each day from 9 a.m. until
4:30 p.m. New memberships
or renewals are to be made
there. Mrs. Ralph Hibbs is
chairman. The telephone num
ber is 772-8118.
-4-
CALENDAR
Tuesday:
7 p.m. - TOPS, Social room.
Medford and Jackson County
ruDiic Horary.
7:30 p.m. - Women's associ
ation of First Presbyterian
church, Candlelight circle.
Mrs. W. Degerness. 520 Da
kota St.
7:30 p.m. - Nite Lighters
extension unit, Parent home.
232 North Second st.. Central
Point. .
8 p.m. - Nevita chanter.
OES, Central Point Masonic
temple.
8 p.m. - Roguette circle.
MOLB, VFW hall.
8 p.m.-District 4, ONA, VA
domiciliary, White City.
Wednesday:
10:30 a.m. - Upper Apple-
gate and Foots Creek exten
sion units, Mrs. Harry Davis,
Foots Creek.
11 a.m. - Security Benefit
club, Pythian bldg.
12 noon - Reames Social
club, Medford Masonic tem
ple.
12:15 p.m. - Elta Deuel
Hubbs tent, DUV, Miss Joan
Guyer, 319 Portland ave.
1 p.m.-Contemporary Book
club, Mrs. B. L. Lageson, 107
Black Oak dr.
8 p.m.-Star Promenaders,
home of Mr. and Mrs. Don
Kilbourn, Dennis road, Land
of Many Oaks.
mmm t
i mm n jit
mm mw
is the way you hegtjpirar home!
But you will know that you' have the. cleanest, most comfortable home modern science can pro
vide, thanks to the most modern ofall heating systems . . . ELECTRIC HEAT.
Reception
Honors
Two Men
U. S. Senator Gaylord Nel
son and Congressman Robert
Duncan were honor guests
Saturday night at a reception
held in the Hedrick Junior
High school cafeteria follow
ing the Roosevelt Memorial
dinner.
Also honored were Senator
Nelson's sister, Mrs. Spencer
Yates, Roseburg, and daugh
ter, Diane, and son, Johnny,
with whom he motored to
Medford.
Tables for the reception
were decorated by Mrs. Lewis
Ulrich and Mrs. Ira McDon
ald with flowers from the
Hanleylands Gardens of Mrs.
E. B. Hanley and Mrs. Hanley
Heffernan.
Pouring were Mrs. Gerald
J. Scannell Jr. of Ashland,
Mrs. Ted Phillips and Mrs.
Thomas Rutter, of Medford.
The event was arranged by
the Eleanor Roosevelt league,
of which Mrs. Frank Chris
tian is president, and the Dem
ocratic Social club, headed by
Mr. Scannell.
Master Point
Play Is Held
Both Medford and out-of-town
players took part in the
monthly master point game of
the Medford unit. American
Contract Bridge league, held
Saturday night at Girls Com
munity club.
North -south winners were
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Holm-
berg, Grants Pass, first, 188 Vi;
Mrs. John Dougherty and
Richard Speicher, Crescent
City. Calif., second. 183V4:
Mrs. Leland Clark and Mrs.
Frank R. Baker, third, 177V4;
Walter Ensminger and John
Shortridge, fourth, 177 points.
winning east-west were Col.
D. H. Barber and Ralph Mee
gan, Ashland, first, 182; Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Crews, sec
ond, 178; the C. B. Brooks,
third, 166; Dr. and Mrs. Wil
liam . Judy, Grants Pass,
fourth, 165.
Mrs. Bernard Hughes and
Mrs. Paul McDuffee served as
hostesses.
Saturday. May 18. the Med
ford and Grants Pass units
will hold the monthly win
ners' game at the Elks club
in Grants Pass.
Low Calorie Cream
It's nice to know dairy sour
cream is not so high in cal
ories as it looks and fastest
The calorie count-down is
only 30 for a tablespoon of
dairy sour cream for those
who find that they are storing
excess pounds.
n . -ltt
BEAVER ELECTRIC t PLUMBING
BROOKS ELECTRIC
COURT STREET ELECTRIC
ELECTRONIC SERVICE
ENLOE ELECTRIC
FELDMAN It OLSON ELETRIC
HARRISON ELECTRIC
MODERN PLUMBING (Heat Pump)
NORPAC SUPPLY
ROGUE ELECTRIC COMPANY
RUSH ELECTRIC COMPANY ..1
TROWBRIDGE ELECTRIC -
The American Music Con
ference reports 21.5 million
Americans play the piano.
-VP :V :;v, V
fcgtjyjsstfstilBsfcsBsttBeiaM
You Are Invited to Our
KITCHEN CLINIC
WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY
May IS and 16
Mr.
TED KOBBERVIC
: Kitchen Design Specialist
MR. HEATH SCHROEDER
Specialist in Built-in Appliances
and other factory specialists will be at the KITCHEN
CENTER at SMITH LUMBER to help you design the
kitchen of your dreams! Come and see how our factory
experts can help you redesign your kitchen. There is
no obligation and nothing to buy. ,
BRING YOUR OWN IDEAS
, FOR YOUR DREAM KITCHEN!
Let the experts show you how to make your dream of
a modern kitchen come true. Whether you plan a new
kitchen now, next year ... or sometime, come to our
KITCHEN CLINICI
MEASURE YOUR KITCHEN .BEFORE
YOU ATTEND THE KITCHEN CLINICI .
Bring the measurements or if yob should need help,
cail us so our experts can plan with you. No obligation,
of course.
"The Kitchen Center
Division of
SMITH LUMBER CO.
8th & Fir Sts.
imr mmn
MID ill
SUPPLY
Keep washed celery in alu
minum foil in the refrigerator
to insure crispness.
8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
Phone 772-7166
CLEAN AND
CAREFREE
AS ELECTRIC
LIGHT!
.773-4549
.772-5209
.535-4135
..773-1971
.535-1269
.773-7751
.664-2091
.773-5368
..773-4645
.772-6603
.772-4960
.773-6241