"V,
PAGE TWENTY-TWO
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1953
5 -" "'"'-- - ?- I - S i i "r v-l
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MARKING THE END of the school year, mem bors of Mills School PTA gathered for tea-time.
Here, at a beautifully appointed table centered with Spring blossoms are Mrs. Clifford Ken
yon, new president for the coming year, pouring; Mrs. Joe Matliek Jr., first vice president;
Mrs. Gerald Wickersham, treasurer; Mrs. James Barnes, secretary; Mrs. Cornelius Olvera,
second vice president and Mrs. Arthur Anderson, retiring president. Members of the faculty
were hosts.
Mills PTA Ends Year With Tec
By Mrs. J, M. Barnes
The lust meeting of Mills PTA
tv-as held Wednesday. Mny 13 at
2:00 D.m. in tho school auditorium.
The meetlne was opened with the
flag salute led by James Barnes
and Richard Putnam. The Invoca
tion was given by the Rev. o. a.
Estes of the Calvary Baptist
Church.
Several selections were plaved
by the Intermediate school band
under the direction of Mr. Yount.
Mrs. Clifford Kenyon gave some
of the hiEhliRhts of the State
convention held in Mcdford, April
23. She said the goal of all PTA's
next year was for Better Homes,
Better Schools and Better Commu
. nitles. Cooperation was the key
note. Verne Speirs, Principal, urged
all mothers with children entering
Mills school next fall, to attend
visitation day. May 21, 2 p.m.
The following new officers were
Installed by Mrs. Dale Baxter.
President, Mrs. Clifford Kenyon;
first vice president, Mrs. Joseph
Matliek Jr.; Second vice president,
Mrs. Cornelius Olvera; secretary,
Mrs. James Barnes; and treasur
er. Mrs. Gerald Wickersham.
jjrs. Arthur Anderson, retiring
president, was presented with the
president's pin by Mrs. Clifford
Kenyon. Mrs. Wayne Galloway pre
sented Mrs. Anderson with a gift
s a token of appreciation for her
fine leadership during the past
year.
Room count was won by Mrs.
After the meeting, the faculty
entertained with a ten in the cafe
teria. The room was attractive with
cpring flowers in baskets placed
on the tea table and about the
loom. Little colored umbrellas also
carried out the spring motif.
Pouring during the afternoon
were Mrs. Clifford Kenyon, Mrs.
Arthur Anderson. Mrs. Verne
Speirs, Mrs. Arnold Gralapp, Mrs.
Paul Landry and Mrs. Andrew
Loney. Incidental music was
played by Madelon Adler.
CLEAN UP
We would do well 1o take a tip
from our neighboring stale, Cali
fornia, in the new statewide high
way cleanup campaign it has in
stituted. Like California, we are an out
door state in which people spend
much time at picnic areas and on
the highways. As a result, the high
ways get littered by passing mo
torists. If motorists will carry a supply
of paper bags In their cars, cigar-
ct packages, gum wrappers, bottles
and beer cans, orange peels and
candy wrappers can be stowed
away instend of thrown from car
windows. The bags can be depos
ited in trash receptacles at picnic
areas or service stations and Ore
gon highways kept free of unsight
ly trash. Tourist business is big
business in Oregon and each per
son can do his part to make the
state's outdoors more attractive to
visitors as well as for our own
C-iijOymCiit.
BPW Meet
Business and Professional Wom
en, meeting for dinner Monday
night at the WiUard Hotel heard
reports of all delegates who at
tended the recent state BPW con
vention at Grants Pass.
Imogcne Boothby, newly elected
president presided for Beth Griggs,
away from town on vacation.
The program, in charge of Sybil
Williams jjnd Eleanor Weatherford
brought Camp Fire Girls and their
leaders, Naomi French and Dee
Kidder and Girl Scouts and their
ieaders, Ella Redkey and Mrs.
Charles McFarlan to the meeting.
The guests presented several mu
sical numbers, short talks and ex
hibits of work accomplished dur
ing the year.
How To Guard Your Child Aqsinsi Polio
Scientists have made progress
toward polio control and a time
mny come when epidemics o' this
disease will be averted, but no
great reduction in caes can be
promised this year.
Use of gamma globulin which
prevents paralytic polio lor a lew
weeks) is strictly curtailed be
cause of shArtness of supply. Only
about 1.000,000 doses of GG will
Varnishing?
Temperatures
Cause Grief
Checking in varnish often Is
caused by the exposure of the sur
face to sunlight, a hot radiator, or
other kinds of heat followed by sud
den coldness or by repeated change
in temperature. Other possible
causes include too much or too
little moisture in the wood before
the finish was applied, or the way
the veneer was cut and which side
was used for the outside surface.
The homemaker can often im
prove the appearance of checked
varnish, by washing the piece with
a mixture of 3 tablespoons of lin-i-ecd
oil and 1 tablespoon of tur
pentine to 1 quart of hot water.
Wash and let dry thoroughly. Then
rub the surface with the following
mixture: For a small area mix
together 2 tablespoons boiled lin
seed oil and 1 tablespoon of tur
pentine Add V, tablespoons of
clear varnish. Double amounts for
large surfaces.
This mixture is also good for re
polishing very dull finishes and for
building up worn or damaged
places.
Warm this mixture before you
use it by placing the container in
a pan of hot water. Apply warm
liquid to only a small part of the
lurniture at a time, rub it hard,
using the palm of your bare hand.
As the mixture sets, it begins to
stiffen and your hand drags. Then
rub off at once the mixture that
remains, using several clean cloths.
If you do not remove this extra,
your furniture will remain sticky.
If a second application does not
conceal the checking, you will need
to do a complete refimshlng job on
your piece. '
be available this year for distri
bution among sonic 46, 00O.0W' chil
dren and adolescents in the ago
groups most susceptible to polto.
Dr. Han E. Van Riper, lwdical
director of the National Foundation
; for In:ar.t;lc Paralyc-i.-, kaa u.,kea
I what parents can do to suleauard
tncir children now again: this
drpad disease.
"With a vaccine still unavail
able." he replied, "and with GG
in short supply,' parents should
heed the precautions which have
been recommended year after vear
when polio is around. The oavice
contained In these simple health
rules holds good. ,
"1. Children may continue to
play with their usual companions
avoiding new groups.
"2. They should wash hands care
fully before eating, avoiding use
of other people's soiled towels,
dishes and tableware.
"3. Beware of fatigue and chill
ing of children, which loners re
sistance to polio virus.
"4. Don't subject young children
to unnecessary aitd lengthy travel.
"5. Consult your doctor if symp
toms of polio appear: headache,
fever, sore throat, unset stomach,
PETERBILT TRUCKS
TRULY BUILT FOR THE JOB
SALES REPRESENTATIVE
JOHN A. NOSLER
Ashland, Oregon
382 Weiqhtman Phone 7841
! tiff neck or tick kef? the p ;
'. iicnt in bed away from others, i
"6. If polio str.kes. turn to your j
' local chapter of the National Foun-;
eiuticn for Infantile Pan.'.y.sn tor
i advice and financial assistance, if .
; needed. "
i Dr. Van Riper points out that
the greatest source of danscr to
! children irbm birth to adolescence,
j the group in which polio is most
I likely to strike, is his own home
i group where he is mosi likely tc
I use common things. The next most
j hkely pl.ices are school, the mov
! ies or other crowded areas. The
j least dangerous spot for inlection
; is the outdoors, (
i Tho main thing for parents to
remember, says Dr. Van Riper, is
not to become panicky. By stay
ing put, even though some cases of
polio crop up in the neighbor
hood, you reduce the chances of
your child contracting the disease.
In any event, the possibilities of
JU.or control., ,,-ral.vt.c polio! One Imal word from Dr. v.,
U one U. loO. In many lusuncc;. j nipsr: Don't Hike your child's ton.
,,, , P, , milH case of the , ills out durir.g the polio . season, ,
disease a.'.d gain Immunity throush Wait until October of November tf
, i, ..... "C
TOMATOES
Tomatoes, known long ago as
"love apples," were used as food
by the Indians of Mexico in pre
historic times, but it was not until
the early 16th century that they
were first eaten In Europe bv tlie
Italians. Because they were a mem-
oer oi the deadly Nightshade fami
ly and thought to be poisonous,
tomatoes were grown in the gar
dens of England, Spain and the
mid-European countries nurelv for
ornamental purposes for manv
years later. In this country they
began to be eaten only in 1812, In
iiew urieans, ana then some 'JU
odd years elapsed before the North
eastern states cultivated them
for food. Today, fresh or Drn.
cessed, they rank among the WD
four or five most Dooular fruit
and vegetables, according to the
US Department of Aericulture's
Bureau of Human Nutrition and
Home Economics, as little as
cup of canned or cooked tomatoes,
or tomato juice, supplies 27 per
cent of vitamin C and 23 per cent
of vitamin A for recommended
daily allowance. Cooking, freezing.
canning and storage destroy very
nine or the vitamin C content.
Tele-fun
by Warren Goodrich
(
I u s
"Call cousin flying tqulrret,
but give him plenty ol tlm
to aniwar. H' boon
grounded)". ..You'll com
plete more calls if you give
the other person plenty of
time to answer at least a
minute . . . Pacific Telephone.
SWEET 'N. TENDER
Fnsv to Fix. Nutritious Dish-
Fried Chicken Livers with Sauce
ml
Freshness makes
such a difference
when you buy
chicken livers.
The freshest livera
I J1 1 vou can buy nave
SaC I 1Pen lu''''roZen
All the good fresh
flavor isfroienin,
nil the hard work is frozen out.
No freshness is lost while they're
on their way to you. Like all
Swanson chicken they've been
processed, cleaned and quick
frozen the very same day on the
fastest, most efficient processing
line in all the world.
Try them fried on toasted
English muffins with a rousu-
Horn Ecwwmitt
room sauce made by heating
..nn nt ..nndnnHed milshrOO
soun with M cup of milk.
Nowadays, the easiest, thrift
iest way to buy chicken is to
buy your favorite piece by the
box. Swanson also quick-freezeg
all drumsticks, breasts, thighs,
gizzards, wings, and hearta.
They've been specially selected,
beautifully cleaned, and thor
oughly washed. Try some plump,
tender Swanson Chicken right
soon. It's quick-frozen fresh!
U. S. Government inspected
Swanson
QUICK-FROZEN CHICKEN PARTS
C. A. SWANSON & SONS, OMAHA I. NEBRASKA
AM im i
ItUI IONNIT tUI ''"jtC .
Ihnen'ca'iS DiscriminatfVig Women Afea!
: S ,! J.'
Mrs. BurgtK Mtrtdlth
Rlu Bonnet fa aiwayi
delicate and freah!"
Mr. Robert Cummtngt
"Blue Bonnet ia my fa
vorite for food value."
Mr, Jan Fr
"X prefer Blue Bonnet to
any other pread."
Mrs. Yogi Berro
"Makra my recipes turn
cut better than ever."
Buy BUE WmU Margarine
and Be Sure oP "fllH3"
FLAVOR. You'll detect Blue Bonnet's
flavor superiority at once! Every de
licious pound has the same- delicate,
sunny.twcct lasle. And Blub Bonnet
Margarine makes other foods taste
better bread, hot rolls, vegetables!
NUTRITION I Blue Bonnit contains
both Vitamin A and Vitamin D which
is not true of most other brands of mar
garine. When you serve Blub Bonnet
to your family, you know that no
other spread for bread is richer in
year-round Vitamins A and D 1
ECONOMY I Blue Bonnet Margarine costs less than half as much as
the high-priced spread for bread ! So use the coupon to try Blue Bonnet
and save money, too. Buy Blue Bonnet and be sure of "all 3' flavor,
nutrition, economy!
Di'.V"
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WW I
,5VV
AU-
"r&V IXIA1
' XrJFZIt-r li7Jl-5
-ft, "" J j CUT ALONG DOTTED LINE -
1 Hi ri5 This couPon 9od 0(VS ill
1 Wl vw at any sfore or LV ?
' 'Xff f&l TOWARD COST OF 1 LB. OF mJ
i Bvfi Blue Bonnet1 Margarine ml
I I tti iaay' I GROCER: Thie coupon will be redeemed by your Standard Brand rvpreeeotaUvt for lOt plus the
Vy, trjjulir handlinit charge. PresenUtion eonatitutea a representation that all terma of thJa offer have ivS&J
f&i ' Wis futfillod and turn payment ia not in violation of any Federal or State regulation. Any other
I ef ' it applimtion ronititutea fraud. The customer mutt pay any aatni tax. Offer food in U.S.A. only.
IHS Void mhervw "(. prohibited or otherwiae reatrirted. OFFER EXPIRES IN 80 DAYS. jP
V-. STANDARD BRANDS INCORPORATED, 595 Modlitn Avenue, New York 22, N. Y. WIS)
T-.- C.CC-tOJ:-N TA
'
lor making juices... if, n$ timple a, that. 5 IV I ' i'JBI
f f f ir'-Bi - , a m m
MA'JULr1!Lj I
DRIP or REGULAR
GRIND
VB IS J 0 1 Cf J A M BORE
Liquid Apple
Apricot Nectar
Pearade
Peach Nectar
Grapefruit Juice
Prune Juice
Pineapple Juice
Vegetable Cocktail
Tomato Juice
Orange & Grapefruit
2 27
Ccudsh'A Jim FOODS
12-oz. Tins
1420 Esolcnode
Phone 2-2S11
Your Most Thoughtful
Grocer!
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