Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1943)
FAGS TWELVE 'S . .. ff ", .v 1 'I ; i- i ,1 ;1 ' 1 . f : f 1 1 i 1 V C Neighbors SeridG66ci Recipes - -' Taking a tip froai our neigh bors to the south, we might in clude avocados in- a main dish, to make it meatless. Avocados, which" the 'people of Middle America use in so many ways. are an excellent meat substitute, having a high fat 'content and a liberal ambunfof vitamins A'and B and a- lot of minerals tq boot. - BAKED AVOCADOS IS ' j SOUR CREAM . T ' - ; 2 cups cooked corn " " . t . . '.4 slices bacon "4 tablespoons green pepper 2 medium sized tomatoes Va teaspoon salt -. teaspoon pepper 2 large avocados i cup sour cream (or add lemon to sweet cream) l Fry bacon until crisp. Pour off . , bacon fat, leaving one tablespoon . In the skillet Chop green pep v per and fry. gently in. the fat for ' five minutes. ' r Add chopped to v mato and continue cooking until tomato is soft Add corn, crumb- led bacon slices and seasonings. - Remove from heat Cut avoca dos in half lengthwise, peel and arrange in greased baking dish. - Fill j avocado halves with the - corn mixture, then pour the sour c cream over carefully. Bake in a ,- hot oven, 450 degrees F.- for 25 minutes. Serves four. - - Speaking of avocado, here's a :: salad' that includes them, and tomatoes, a good combination for this time of year. ; MEXICAN SALAD ; "1 large avocado t - - 4 medium tomatoes -1 small onion ' Shredded lettuce Cut avocado - in half ; length Wise, remove seed 'and peel. Cut into crosswise slices. Slice onion . paper thin; slice tomatoes cross wise. Arrange overlapping alter nate slices, of tomato, onion and avocado on a leaf of romaine or a flat bed of finely shredded let- - tuce. J Pass . lime juice dressing. ' Serves 4. J , LIME JUICE DRESSING . cup salad oil ( i Vi teaspoon salt teaspoon paprika Dash cayenne Dash black pepper . I , cup lime juice (or lemon) , Mix seasonings thoroughly with oil, add lime juice. Chill and beat well before serving. Vegetables will take the spot light in today's dinner menu. Pear salad with . Cheese dressing - Braised shortribs with Glazed parsnips Baked potatoes Frozen berry shortcake GLAZED PARSNIPS 6 cooked peeled parsnips 3 tablespoons fat or meat . drippings 1 tablespoon corn syrup or sugar , Va teaspoon salt . teaspoon pepper . Brown parsnips quickly in fat heated in frying pan. Add rest of ingredients. Cover and simmer 10 minutes. "Turn several times . with 2 forks. RATION CALENDAR rooD Canned Goods Blu stamp X. . vanu umu IX ov. zu. Meat, cheese -tanned fish and edl- Bie lats Brown stamps C. D. E mnti V aivul until i sugar coupon No. 14. is and 16 1 expire uctooer 31. good for 5 pounds. ournp 23 m book .4 Rood for S inunas until January 19. SHOES Stamp No. 18. book one. good in oennneiy. Airplane stamp No. 1 valid . CASOLINK Bek A coupons No. S now rood for three gallons each. FUEL OIL Period 1 coupons In new fuel oil rations valid through January 3. Cou pon with gallonage printed on the face valid for amount indicated un tUexpiration data shofn on coupon TIRES ; Cars with C ration books must have tires inspected every 3 months; B - k" eXery 4 month: A books every S months. Commercial motor ve niclea fare inspections every S anonths or every 5000 miit Cone to the Wind - AiKUBl-(iip-Windmills from BriUin are being sent to Kenya hi mia uie coiony s extended dairy na suKK-iarnung industry. WORTH WAITING FOX man has gone to war ... and with him has gone your favorite Societe chocolates -and candies. - When sometimes you don't find these delicious confections at the candy counter, remember that they, too, are "worth waiting for" .: mratiAi CANDY CO. flATIll !i - : mm0m'1 1 11 U Ml pi I UUIIBHI.Ilim -v - ' f - " . -a , ... - " ' " Cereals Prove" Friend to Wartime Housewife as Meat Extenders 1 There axe numerous possibilities in cereal extended meat loaves. The meat itself might be ground beef, veal, lamb, pork, or a combination of any of these. The cereal or cereal product may be crackers, bread, macaroni, nee, cornmeaJ, hominy, oat meal, prepared breakfast foods j Cereals are good meat extenders. Their flavor is bland, so by Make Them Yourself The bazaar and gift season is on the way ... summer on the wing. So out with your needle, scrap bag, paint brush, glue pot! Send now for instructions 493 which contains money - making ideas and gifts to please everyone from grandma to the baby. Ood les of fun to make! Instructions 493 contain detailed directions for 18 articles; list of materials required. - Send ELEVEN CENTS In Coins for this pattern to the Oregon States man. Needlecraft Dept. Salem. Ore. Write plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. Medal 25 Years Late BURLINGTON, - Allen R. Kelly was wounded in France 25 years ago while serving with the 14th French division. The war department notified him the-other day he- would receive the purple heart decoration. He already had received the Croix de Guerre and a J French citation. How's it -Back Home? tTtl Send hla a real slice of home- through the USO-one of the irJ&7o7 war relief agencies that have banded to gether with our own conmunlty agenil : cles this year to bolster no rale and relieve distress on the battle front, among the civilian victims of war and here at home. Just one ; contribution this year helps all of t the&e. Make It big. Hake it riow. : ; . ' ' - . ; . T . . ; " -t .... , w v v . 3i Salem Unilcd Uar Chcd IN CONJUNCTION WITH ' Ilafional Uar Fnmb This Vit!: Message rfiSaOom on a FUnrjDTGJnE .CO. or left-over breakfast cereal. absorbing meat, flavor : they .stretch meat over more servings. Homemakers welcome new Ideas . in cereal extended meat loaves because they are such point-wise servings.; " .: . : " "": . It .must be remembered, how ever, that whenever part of the ' standard' serving' of meat is re placed .by another food, the pro . tein, vitamins- and minerals that he - meat would have supplied, must be made up in the rest of ; the day's jfoods. Vi'vi f'S'I ?:) .Variety' ; in' . extended meat dishes : is achieved - in these two meat loaf recipes, each using a different cereal.-f TT'v " j iNDmrjUAi. meat loates 1 pound ground veal ' 1 pound ground pork. 4 cup of soup stock or milk 1 cup , quick-cooking ; oat- - meal': J- - : , ,J - , - 1 egg --- r, -2 teaspoons salt ' teaspoon onion juice ' Paprika S ; Combine ingredients in the order given'. Pack meat mixture into a loaf pan. With a knife, di vide the loaf in half lengthwise. Then cut across the loaf making the desired number of servings. Sprinkle with paprika. Bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees) for 1 hours. When ready to serve, turn out on a cake rack, and in vert, brown side up on a plat ter. Serves 10 to 12. : MEAT-RICE LOAF 1 pound ground beef pound ground pork 1 cup cooked rice -1 egg 3 tablespoons chopped onion 1 teaspoons salt ; Va teaspoon pepper 4 cup milk - teaspoon poultry seasoning Mix all ingredients thorough-1 ly. Pack into a greased loaf pan and bake in a moderate oven (325 degrees) , for one and one- half hours. Serves 8-10. Pratum Heads Named For War Chest Drive rKAiUM ine united war chest campaign in the Pratum district.; is being carried . on " this week with Fred deVries as cap lain, volunteer solicitors are as follows: Carl Vogt for the north division; Mrs. John Roth, west; Mrs. George Kleen, central: Mrs. Fred Cornu, east; Mrs. William Anderson and Fred deVries, south central, and Mrs. C- A. Lynds, south section. The campaign ends Tuesday, October 28. r Sponsored by ttf tilt" . : .r7 1 7 Fatlier, Son To Become Eagle Scoiits ; Father and son receive Eagle Scout ' badges in the first such ceremony ever staged in Salem, which will climax the Cherry City districts "fall roundup . Friday night in the, Parrish junior high school gymnasium. ; Robert Wagers, sr., who was Life Scout when a boy and who returned to scouting approximate ly four years ago r scoutmaster of troop 42, Middle Grove, earned the' highest rank, the Boy, Scouts offer as he worked with his son. Robert Wagers, jr with that son Friday night will be awarded the Eagle. - - Supreme Court Associate "Jus tice Arthur D. Hay will preside at the court of honor, which it is expected many parents will attend ; a tribute - to - their . own sons and to the Wagers "team. i The court is. to follow games. fun and activities arranged for members, masters and other lead ers of the district's 20 troops and four Cub packs, which starts at 7:30 pjn. An artificial campfire is to be a feature of the closing ceremony. - . False Alarm Clock . MARKET RASEN, England-OP) -Early one morning . the town hall clock at this ' little Lincolnshire town began to strike the hour and kept on chiming. For a half hour the chimes rang out over the sleepy town. .The town's home guardVand 2,000 citizens,' thinking it - was an invasion, alarm, turned out, Finally somebody tied up the mechanism,', the clock stopped striking . and'the townfolk' went back to bed. ' ' - ' II II : 1 ffiBB i: h ! F BUY -rf II' ''-It I I fi?53VSfete - - - '' --.... fe I It i 'jm- -. x..,- . II 1 . i L , , 1 Bucket Brigade Style Removes Rubble Haad-OTer-luuid, American sdiers brigade t clear away rabble X then- barracks which were de streyed by German -plaated dynamite lav the second time explosion suffered at Naples. (AP wirepheta by signal corps fs41ophU. . Home Dry Cleaning1 " ' To Be Explained . To -Macleay- Women MACLEAY ' Sponsored ' by the Pratum home' extension, unit, which is composed of women in the vicinity of Pratum and Mac leay, ' demonstration of "Dry nn rr pun m n " - . 1 J; adopt the techniqne of a bucket Cleaning at Home will be given Tuesday starting; at 1:30 at. the Macleay grange halL by -. Miss Frances - Clinton, - Marion - county demonstration agent. - - - j How to clean woolens, rayon, gloves and felt hats will be demf onstrated. ' "'All women interested are invited- to attend. ' -- 1 rJacliine SIiop Class to Op6n - Machines repainted to conform to DuPont's scheme for "three di mensional seeing," Salem high school machine shop will shortly offer a new class of training lot persons above the age of 18 years and not engaged In an essential Industry, E. T. Barhett, vocation X al education supervisor for the Salem school system, announced Wednesday. Registration" and registration of trainees will be taken at the shops this week, Barnett said, ex plaining that there " Is no . charge since costs are borne by federal funds allocated to the state board of education for vocational edu cation in cooperation with Salem schools. -, . ' Hours of registration are from 9 a. m. to noon," 1 to 5 p. m. and from T0 -to p. m. ; ; Grangers Nowo MACLEAY Grange i oc I a 1 night will be held, at the grange hall Saturday night, Edward Took- er-Is social chairmna.' Black Well Again PIONEER Elmo Black, who was operated on for appendicitis about a . month ago, was. able f to return to work for the first time Monday night'. " Crew Fixes Madrona WEST " SALEM The : s t reet crew - nave been making some much needed repairs on Madrona. street, : in; regraveling and filling in the ruts. . - - ; I No Ral'cnin ; ' On Africa Front ' RICHMOTJD, Va. H5- Virgin ians who sit down to Sunday din ners . of fried chicken, Virginia ham and all the trimmings are practically fasting, say reports from North Africa. 2 Major M. M. Pinckney, attached to an army hospital unit. Is au thority for the Information. Invit ed to the home of a pasha who was grateful for some dental at tention zrom uie yunerlcans. Ma jor Pinckney's party was served with:,: ' , . j A delicious thick soup; pigeon pie with a crisp, flaky crust; thin and crisp potato chips; a mixed vegetable dish which tasted like more; roast mutton cooked with vegetables; whole chickens, very tender, cooked with olive oil: an other course of vegetables; Arab coush-coush, a bowl filled with coarsely ground grain, sugared dates and raisins mixed into a jelly; a dessert course of, huge muscat grapes and then tea, four glasses each. What's more, wrote the major. you could eat with your fingers. Candy Out for Duration DAVENPORT, la. -(M)-Char- lene Brunk, four ; and one half years old, has been pinching pen nies the last 18 months to help the war effort Denying herself cones and candy, Charlene, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Brunk, accumulated 3500 pennies and converted them into a war bond and stamps. . , . ' Running on the Rims . GARDEN CITY, Kas.UP)-Tbe rubber shortage finally caught up with F. E. Stone, Garden City con- tractor. He couldn't get tires to keep his wheelbarrows runnlnav