Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, March 25, 1954, Page 28, Image 28

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    Thursday, Man 23, Wl
Go Italian With Shrimp Marinara
By CECILY BBOrNSTONB lmn . JT
m
ii you sometimes like In "at
Italian" when you're rests ursnt-
oouna, iry preparing thl simple
but delicious Italian-style shrimp
li and enjoy it at home.
IU sauce is -uuluclcened just
the true flavor of lightly-seasoned
tomatoea cornea through. The
herbs in the sauce are those used
most often in Italian cooking
oregano, basil and parsley, and of
course there's a suspicion of gar
lic. Our recipe calk for garlic
salt, but you may add a minced
or crushed clov.. of garlic if you
. prefer.
This Shrimp M.-inara is a fine
. last-minute recipe. You can shell,
clean and refrigerate the shrimp
In the morning. At suppcrtime
you cen quickly put the ssucd
together, '.hen sdf! the r.;w incited
seafood just before it has finished
cooking. Although raw shrimp
conies in an interesting assort
ment of colors from greenish
gray to coral It all turns pink
the momeit It starts to cook.
Two "musts" with this shrimp
dish are Italian bread or crisp
rolls and a green salad.
But do you want to start off
with an appetizer? Then how
about tempting antlpasto? Dur
ing Lent, mak. this a platter of
stuffed hard-cooked eggs, cooked
white beans marinated in olive
oil and wine inegar and sea
toned with salt and freshly-
ground pepper, crisp ribs of cel
ery, green olivet and itnn i
canned pimiento. By the way,
white beans come canned these
days so all you have to do is to
put them in the marinade.
Caramel custard rounds out
this Italian-style menu delirious
ly. A demitasse of black coffee
served in a small, heavy, footed
glass, accompanied by a twist of
lemon peel and sugar, is a perfect
list touch.
SHRIMP MARINARA
Ingredients: 1 pound shrimp
fresh or frozen), 2 tablespoons
olive oil, V cup finely diced cel
ery, Vt teaspoon salt, Vt teaspoon
cayenne pepper, Vi teaspoon
sugar, 14 teaspoon garlic salt,
V teaspoon basiL 1 teaspoon
urecana, 2 tablespoons minced
parai.-y, on X S' can (i
pound and 12 ounces) peeled to
matoes. Method: Shell and clean the
shrimp, do not cook. Heat oil
in a 10-inch skillet Add celery
and cook over low heat until ten
der. Add salt, cayenne, sugar,
garlic sslt, basil, oregano, pars
ley and tomatoes. Allow to
bubble gently over low heat,
stirring often, until slightly
thick 30 to 43 minutes. Add
shrimp. Cover skillet and cook
3 to 5 minutes depending on
size of shrimp. Serve over
cooked rice if desired. Makes
4 servings.
Mt Angel
MT. ANGEL New to students
t Mt Angel Women's college
this year is an all-school project
' In observation and student teach
ing adopted to the different
levels of those participating.
From March 29 to April 2
Itudentt in teacher-education
will be assigned to various
schools and Institutions selected
on the basis of student interest
and year level in college.
Freshmen will spend their
week in observation only; sopho
mores will serve as teaching
aides and will see methods and
techniques in action; upper class
men will engage more extensive
ly in the regular school program,
teaching under supervision. For
them the experience will serve
as an overview and culminating
activity, following their first se
mester's work in supervised
teaching.
Student teachers from Mt. An
gel Women's college and their
supervising teachers will meet
informally in the college lounge
the evening of March 25. The
soiree will be an introduction to
the full week of student teach
ing and observation, March 29
to April 2. Panels on cadet teach
ing by supervisors and students
will highlight the evening.
Summer school announcement
bulletins were released from the
registrar's office at ML Angel
Women's college this past week.
Workshops will again be the
main feature of the six-week ses
sion, June 22 to July 23. Three
week workshops include "Art in
the Elemetnary School," "Cor
rective Speech and Reading," and
"Health and Physical Education."
Among other offerings are edu
cational psychology, arithmetic
in the elementary school, Oregon
school law, literature of the
Western World, human geog
raphy, American history and gov
ernment, historv of western civil
ization. Oregon history, mental
hvciene. interracial relations,
public speaking and theology for
bisters.
Miss Katherine Brandt and
Miss Marie Piatz, co-cditors of
the "Abiqua," the Mt. Angel
Women's college and academy
school paper, were the featured
guest speakers at the luncheon
meeting of the Mt. Angel Busi
ness Men's club, Monday noon
at the ML Angel hotel.
Joseph Berchtold and Darrcl
Sample were introduced as new
members of the club. Leonard
Fisher outlined the Easter Seal
fund campaign, and T. B. Endres
spoke on the possibilities of ob
tainine new industries.
The secretary read a communi
cation from the Benedictine Sis
ten who thanked the business
Mine Laboratory to
Remain in Albany
SPRINGFIELD, Ore. (UP)-The
Springfield Chamber of Commerce
today was notified by two mem
bers of the Oregon Congressional
delegation that the Bureau of
Mines laboratory at Albany, Ore.,
will not be moved to the Midwest.
Reps. Harris Ellsworth and Sam
Coon reported that the Bureau of
Mines had dropped its plans for
moving the laboratory. The pro
posed move had been protested by
the Springfield and Albany Cham
bers of Commerce and the Oregon
Development Commission as un
economical and a blow to the min
ing industry in the West
North Howell
Shrimp la Tomito Sane the Italian Way.
To Buy Some
Surplus Spuds
WASHINGTON HI - The Airrl.
culture Department announced
Wednesday that it will buy a "lim
ited" quantity of carry-over sup
effort to help bolster grower
prices.
It also will subsidize the diver
sion of additional unspecified quan
tities of the old potatoes into the
manufacture of starch and potato
flur..
The department said that be
cause of the unusually large sup
plies of old crop potatoes, "disor
derly market conditions" confront
producers.
These actins are being taken at
the behest of growers and con
gressmen from major potato-producing
states. The department
earlier had turned down such re
quest on the grounds that price
support operations by the govern
ment might serve to encourage
growers to plant too many pota
tes again this year.
Escapes in Bay
Drowns in Bath
SEATTLE III Stanley J. Dec
escaped with his life Tuesday
when his car plunged from the end
of a pier into the deep waters of
Salmon Bay.
Wednesday he died by drowning
m a bathtub.
Coroner John P. Brill Jr. said
Dec. 33, was admitted to a Kirk-
land Sanitarium Tuesday vening
for treatment of "general oppres
siveness." Wednesday morning
another patient found him in the
bathtub.
Dec and his (-year-old son. Thom
, were in the car when it rolled
off the pier while me father was
trying to locate a boat belonging
to clients. Dec was an insurance
underwriter.
He managed to open a window
of the car and escaped through it,
pulling the boy with him. Fish
ermen rescued the pair.
Brill said no notes explaining
the drowning were found in Dec's
belongings.
NORTH HOWELL House
guests for several dayt of Mr.
and Mrs. Andrew Hall were their
two granddaughters, Sharan and
Kathy Hatrick from Portland.
Mrs. Richard Hatrick brought
the girls down Wednesday.
Mrs. Andrew Hall and Mrs.
Leo Peterson were hostesses to
the North Howell home eco
nomics club on Tuesday after
noon. A 1:30 o'clock luncheon
was served.
A traveling basket which has
been going around this past
month was opened and the money
turned over to the treasurer. The
hostesses each month chooses a
money-making project Mrs. Hall
and Mrs. Peterson chose the
traveling basket
Bob Fossholm has missed
school several days this week
with a case of tonsilitis.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Foul
hober and children were over
night guests Wednesday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Blaney.
Sunday afternoon Mr. and Mrs.
Art Rasmason, accompanied by
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Strachan,
drove up to Detroit dam.
Mr. and Mrs. John Beals were
dinner guests Sunday in Salem
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Le
Roy Beals, John Beals' birthday
anniversary was honored at din
ner. Friday evening a miscellaneous
shower was given at the Grange
hall for the newly weds, Mr. and
Mrs. LeRoy Beals, the hosts for
the occasion were Mrs. Percy 1
Dunn and Mrs. Bill Albin.
SPEED CONTROLS WORK
RALEIGH, N. C. (ff) "It we
can keep them from speeding, we
can keep them alive." That's the
theme of Raleigh's po.ice depart
ment The city recently complet
ed 13 months without a traffic
fatality.
QUEEN TO LEAVE
AUSTRALIA
ADELAIDE, Ausralia Wl
Queen Elizabeth II will broadcast
a farewell to Australia from the
Royal Tour Liner Gothic when
she leaves Freeman lie April 1.
3 Common Cancers
Can Now Be Detected
BOSTON (-Boston
have devised methods of detecting
and diagnosing in a relatively
early stage three of the common
est sailers cancers ot tne Drain,
OK Plan for
Seattle NIKE
(fl A House
subcommiite i ditiosa.
tA . m . taer fifv. .c.. .
WASHINGTON
armed servici
WedaeenAjr twxA ass?.)
project to acquire land for mount
ing NIKE guide! missle batteries
around Seattle.
The project now mutt be ap
proved by the full committee and
by the Senate Armed Services
Committee.
Seattle is the 10th metropolitan
area to be specified publicly as
part of the nationwide network of
NIKE antiaircraft defenses. Mili
tary of fid lis claim the NIKE has
an unusually high rats of accuracy
in intercepting hostile aircraft
Wendesday's project is to pur
chase 195 acres and obtain ease
ment rights to another 1,348 seres.
Army witnesses said.
Chairman Cunningham (R-Iowa)
expressed hope after the open
hearing that the land would not
cost the full $667,000.
Army witnesses testified that
this would bt their last NIKE proj
ect in the current year's program.
By FRANK CARET
AP Science Writer
scientists i breast and uterine eenrlz. the tin
of the womb.
The results of this research were
disclosed today to a group of sci
ence writers .touring leading re
search centers under the guidance
of the American Cancer Society.
A Tufts Medical School scientist,
Dr. William H. Fishman, has
found a simple, cheap and rapid
way of detecting not only well -established
cancers of the uterine
cervix in poet-rnenopausal women
but also cancers of microscopic
size and even precancerous con-
Red China's Top Man
Back in Circulation
HONG KONG Mao Tie
Tung, Red China's top man, was
reported Wednesday back In cir
culation after three months of ab
sence from public life.
The Communist New China News
Agency reported he presided Tues
day over a meeting in Peiping
of the special government com
mittee to draft a national consti
tution. It was his first reported appear
ance since he attended" the Dec.
It meeting of the government ad
ministration council.
Advertising Man
Dies in Vets' Hospital
LOS ANGELES W - J. T. Cross
ley, 56, former advertising director
of the Portland Oregonian, died In
a veterans' hospital here Tuesday.
He suffered a heart attack last
Wednesday.
A native of Portland, he served
in the Navy during the first World
War. He came here in 1935 and
engaged In the advertising busi
ness, becoming a partner In a
firm four years ago.
Ha is survived bv Hie widow.
Virginia, a son, a daughter and
two grandchildren.
Springfield Ships
First Load of Alloy
SPRINGFIELD. Ore. (UP) The
first carload of aluminum silicon
alloy shipped by the National Met
allurgical corporation ot Spring
field today was on its way to Chi
cago processors.
The nlant here started operations
recently, using a newly developed
mwhi discovered at the Bureau
of Mines research laboratory at the check, the complaint alleges,
Alhjknv. I 1 1 1 1 -i
The Springfield Chamber of Com- good for expansion of the plant In
merce reported that prospects are 1 the near future.
HELD FOR BAD CHECK
ALBANY Don Brunson was
bound over to the grsnd jury
on a bad check charge with bail
set at $1500 in district court Ha
is accused of having passed a
check on November 16. 1953.
drawn on the First National Bank
ot Lebanon, without having funds
to cover it Jack Walton, pro
prietor of the 88 Tavern cashed
less man JO per cent of proven
cancers, at brought to light many
cancerous and precancerous con
ditions which might have . been
missed by conventional methods,
he said.
Dr. William H. Sweet, neuro
surgeon, and Dr. Gordon L.
Brownell. physicist, of the Harvard
University School of Medicine and
Massachusetts General Hospital,
reported that they could not only
diagnose but even pinpoint brain
tumors without opening the tkulL
They do this by Injecting the
patient with radioactive arsenic.
which concentrates in brain tu
mora and can be traced with twin
scintillation counters an hour or a
day later. A scintillation counter
detects radiation.
Dr. Ira T. Nathanson and asso
ciates of the tame institutions have
found they can predict with high
accuracy whether a lump in the
breast is benign or cancerous.
They do this by injecting the
patient with radioactive potassium,
which concentrates in cancer and,
as a rule, goes in very small quan
tity to benign tumors.
While the scientists emphasize
that the method it not a sure test
for breast cancer they Indicate
that their figures leave no doubt
but that patients now may have a
good idea before an operation as
to whether the lump Is innocent or
whether it is cancer. Th latter
verdict calls for extensive surg
ery, lrcludlng removal of the
breast
The test was made on 100 wom
en with benign and malignant
breast tumors. None of the benign
tumors took up suspicious qusnti
ties of the radioactive potassium.
The science writers in another
interview were told that It pa
tients with localized cancer of the
voice box (larynx) treated during
the last (our years by mulumll-
lion-volt X-rays now show no evi
dence of Hie disease.
They were not called cured.
Five years must past following
treatment before any cancer pa
tient la considered cured.
The report waa made by Dr.
John O. Trump, engineer, of the
Massachusetts Institute of Tech
nology, who worked with doctors
attached to the Lahey Clinic here.
men for their part in planting
ornamental trees slong the high
way near the Mt. Angel Academy.
The business men were also com
mended for their help with the
SL Mary's Psrish dinner Sunday.
Tastes just right with
BLUE PLATE
Canned Shrimp
HereVeasy tempting variety for folks who love fine seafood.
7Add umP re.y Bl Conned Shrimp re she...
Muce Ht In double belief, serve e too.t.
. 0, l". PI., serine I-
O, odd .hepped el- '""'
potatoes. Inope In potties end deep fry.
Mtl.HIN.il,"","'k-
I ssmffs f
I mm Save 10c . Doz- 29c 1 L
I snnnixPai Clip Coupon Pcj. I Large, Green ' M I "iV
i llll BLUE BONNET II 2
MARGARINE 27c 11 GAIT 5 !&
I Swift Premium Bed Label I
SUNSHINE or NABISCO mmmm Butt or I kf
CRACKERS a...., 43c HAMSS9C f
llll 1 Switt t Premium II m
5 Minute Shrimp Supper CATSUP 2 . 25c Jfii I
. Piece Lb. eieV'' llll E
fflff SWIFTS BEET , si a U.S. Gov't Inspected Grade Good iH
f f Sandwich Steaks 'f.0. 49c L
i iLi&ttKt ) I -a ROAST 49c !,
lfP k 25. SUCEDBAC0N
K5e CAKE UK 3 ,. 89c -e I
L. - w - el I .11 IHJ .Mir.PIl I a.M aaaaai aaw .taw III I I v
m flour ,,,79cgEHM S
f Howswwtowpmcsi J FOOD MARKET I
I LUMBERJACK IT faff 120 ;L II t
ms''m!j Prlcea Eifectlva FrU Sat and Sun.
i
RABBIT
EGGS!
YOUR
ORDER
PLACED
NOW,
WITH A
SMALL
DEPOSIT,
WILL
NSURE
YOU AN
ADEQUATE
SUPPLY OF
WHITE
EGGS
FOR EASTER
VEAL
CUTLETS
While TheyU
No. 1
Deschutes
SPUDS
VIA MlOlC
uwibi.u 2
GROUND
BEEF
Our
Tools,
Seeds,
Fertilizer,
And Lots Of
Back-Breaking
Work Will
Make You a
Beautiful
Garden
FRANKS
Assarted
LUNCH
MEAT
i, 39'
lythe riece
Prices Effettirt
Thursday P.M. Until
Supplies Are Exhausted
Dickson's
Highway t
At 12th St. Junction
t .
- ' wr, - w