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About Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946 | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1950)
SO U T H E R N O REG O N N E W S REVIEW M IR R O R * * •* * * ♦- * * * * * ( • 0 / Your M IN D HOUSEHOLD M ÍM O S Learn How To Enjoy Life " Keep Posted on Values By Reading the Ads Copy-Cat Fashions Fun to W ear ra te d p a tte rit In » lie » 11, 14 IH 10. K b 44). 4J end 44 Side 14. 4 ' e > « rd » u l ¿11» In c h . P a tte r n No. 0371 le « aaw r ile p e r la ru le d p o t i n n h i a lte e 1. 4. H H. 10 und 11 y eu re S l/e 4. 1 'e y u rd e of :tf> In ch . By Lawrence Gould H IK IN G U H U L FATTKKN AJ0 K auli» W a ll« M «'»•« E n d o w JS re n te p a tte rn deeired. D IP T , 7 III In coinè fa r each FASYI No dull (rqutrwL ILndlt» like puny , u«lluiJ<os n rC E T ^ « t\ KC9C I LOOSE HANDLES.,, Ullu On electric fan», lawn mowers roller »kate» 3 * IN - ON E Oil Dot's pleasure-seeking lead lo crime? Serve Baked Ham for Special Dinners (See Recipes Below) Eating— Deluxe! yHEN YOU'RE PLANNING to serve a special occasion din ner for company or fa m ily, isn't it nice to have the menu planned and recipes for everything handy? There's real eating enjoyment in the menu in today’ s column, and the directions for m aking these special dishes. Ham is a m ighty economical cut of meat rig ht now, and it makes a .,-¿-7—¡nice showing at . the table with its rosy pink color ¿and juicy, suc- jculent s lic e s . r jgThen, too. there’s . Y^good eating from Sit fo r several •days which makes ham kind to your food budget. To serve a large number, pur chase a h alf or whole ham. For two or four people, a ham slice w ill serve as a meal. Ready-cooked ham needs to be heated thorough ly only if you want it hot; cured but tenderized ham requires about 25 to 30 minutes to the pound for roasting at slow (300°) tempera ture. . . . OR BASTING and glazing the ham, use any of the following: honey, c o rn syrup, molasses, pickled fru it Juices or canned fru it juices, red jellies, cranberry sauce or ginger ale. Smoked picnic hams are sim ilar In flavor and appearance to regular hams, and may be preferred by the sm aller families. Here’s a hand some way to prepare this cut: • Baked Orange Picnic Ham Smoked picnic ham, 4 to 6 pounds si cup brown sugar Grated rind and juice of 1 orange Orange slices Whole cloves Place picnic ham on a rack In a preheated oven (325°). F or an uncooked picnic, baked 30 minutes to the pound; heat a cooked picnic 10 minutes to the pound. H alf an hour before end of baking time, re move ham from oven and score ham. M ix brown sugar and orange juice together and spread over ham. Using whole cloves, stick a few orange slices and maraschino cherries on ham and finish baking D uring the last 10 minutes of bak ing time, increase the oven heat tn 400° to finish browning. 8 1 1 1 marshmallows egg tablespoon cold water cup almonds, blanched and chopped Season potatoes and add butter Mold potato m ixture around marsh mallows, form ing 8 balls with a marshmallow in the center of each. Beat egg and add cold water. Dip potato balls in egg. then in al monds. F ry in deep hot fat (365") u ntil golden brown, turning while frying. YOU WANT a ham dinner for prepared in this way is delicious delightful and different: •South Sea Island Ham (Serves 4) 1 slice, ready to eat bam, % inch thick 1 banana •4 cup brown sugar •4 cup coconut 3 tablespoons vinegar 2 teaspoons butter Place ham in a baking dish. Cut banana lengthwise and then In half. Arrange banana sections on top of ham and sprinkle with brown sugar, coconut and vinegar. Dot w ith butter. Bake in a moderate (350’ ) oven for 20 minutes. •M allow Sweet Potato Balls (Serves 8) 3 cups w arm , mashed sweet potatoes Salt and pepper to taste 3 tablespoons melted butter TRIAT THE FAMIIY TO A IATCH Of 8572 I-I2 w . M other and D aughter A D O R A B L E , cool looking pina I fores in the popular m other 1 and daughter fashion. Each but- i tons down the back, has tin y [ shoulder ru ffle s and am ple pock ets. T rim w ith c o lo rfu l ric rac. • • • Are eccentric people "crazy Answer: Certainly not always. Insane people may and do “ act strangely," but so to a less degree do many men and women who are quite aware of what they're doing and have what they regard as good reasons for it. On the whole, a healthy-minded person w ill pre fer to follow the conventions be- P a tte r n No S37I la a » « w r it « parfo- 1. : ! I I u. Cook toffether ovar hot w ater • • « ’/< cap batta» H lb. m o»»h m o llo w t (abou t S M d a i ) Are Fun, Easy to Paint 2 Into grriuaxl • I m > w I, pour . . . 3 c ap « K o llo g g 't R ica K r l t p U t . Add rnAr«hin«llow mixture, get 24 piccrai from !>’ i l.C I« »o K w n k »daran mnke 'em! When syrupy, mid and brat in . . . V*i teaspoon v a a lii« . Large Flower Designs Answer: C ertainly not. A child who is old enough to ask questions you can't answer should be able to face the fact that no one knows everything, and the longer this discovery is put off. the more of a shock it w ill be. Children should be taught that knowledge is like money; it’ s not given for nothing, but has to be worked for. But when possible, say, " I don't know, but I w ill try to find out," and encourage children to do the same. With an adult or a child, the person who fears to "display his Ignorance" w ill never over come IL 0 ^ LOOKING AT RELIGION L P r ic e o f p a tte rn 285 le 25c. Send o rd e r to W ORKSHOP PATTERN D r a w e r 10 B ed fo rd 11111«. N e w S E R V IC E T o rk . ' AUTO-LITE • , X, J, F a in t Gay Garden »'lowers A R G E F LO W E R designs fo r cupboard d o o r s , g ra ce fu l borders and sm a ll m o tifs are easy to p a in t w ith pattern 285. The designs m ay be traced and used in m any d iffe re n t ways. Color guide and directions are included. T * /S /W / Smoother Performance—Double Life and Greater Gas Savings* F n ja y the«« « p e rla i advantage*« by re p la c in g w o rn -o u t »park plug« w ith new w ld e -g a p A u la * L i t * R e»l«tor S p a rk P lu g * — th e new est a d d itio n to the com plete lin e o f re g u la r, tra n s p o rt, a v ia tio n , m a rin e an d m odel « park plug« Ig n itio n E n g in e e re d by A u to -L ite . *C ut a w a y v ie w »h o w l the 10,000 ohm R»«i»tor which perm it« w id e r In itia l g ap vetting« a n d make« the«« a d v an tag e« po»»»ble. Double Hie under equ al con di tion« a« com pared w ith narro w g a p «park plug«. CBS B A O IO N IT W O B K T HU » S 0 AYS - CB » T I H V l i t O N TUISOAVS are made from a beaten yeast batter, and are both quick and easy to make: F I F i-W,«-... -------- say, “I don’t know”? LYN N CHAMBERS’ MENU Frosted Cranberry Juice •Baked Orange Picnic Ham with Orange Slices •M allow Sweet Potato Balls Buttered Asparagus • Hot Cross Puffs •Molded Cabbage Salad Beverage Pineapple Nut Cake M ints Nuts •Recipe Given W’ Answer: Not in itself. The most cause it saves tim e and trouble, virtuous person seeks what gives but there's no fixed rule as to how him pleasure—at least some of rig idly he’ll do so. The fact that the time. According to Dr. J. a man has nerve enough to order Groen. Dutch psychologist, c rim raw steak if he likes it - o r a plump inality Is caused by disharmony woman w ill not wear a girdle— between the wish for pleasure may show only exceptional tide and the demands of reality—by a pendence. person's wanting to enjoy life and not knowing how to do so without getting into trouble. This may be due to defective mentality, to un realistic early training, or occa sionally to having been brought up with such rigid m oral stand ards that one gives up trying to reach them. Should a parent be afraid to •Hot Cross Puffs (Makes 24 2-lnch puffs) 1 package yeast, compressed or dry granular % cup lukewarm water 1 cup m ilk *4 cup sugar 2 teaspoons salt <4 cup shortening 3*4 cups sifted flour (about) V4 teaspoon cinnamon *4 teaspoon nutmeg 2 eggs 1 cup currants Confectioners’ sugar icing Soften yeast in lukewarm water. Scald m ilk. Add sugar, salt and shortening; cool to lukewarm. Add two cups flour, cinnamon and nut meg and beat well. Add softened yeast and eggs and m ix thoroughly. Add enough flour to make a stiff batter. B e a t thoroughly until smooth. Cover and let rise in a warm place until light and bubbly (about one hour). Add currants and stir down. F ill greased m uffin pans, one-half full, and let rise until light (about 30 minutes). Bake In a mod erate (375*) oven 15—20 minutes. Make a cross on each puff with confectioners' sugar icing. •Molded Cabbage Salad (Serves 8) 1 package lemon-flavored gel atin 1 cup boiling water 2 tablespoons cider vinegar 2 tablespoons tarragon vine L Y N N SAYS: Quick M eat Dishes Help on Busy Days Make a barbecue sauce by m ix lng together 2 tablespoons brown sugar, 2 tablespoons vinegar, 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce and 14 cup of catsup. Spread over ham slice or ham burgers and broil. Season ground m eat according to taste and form into balls. Brown in skillet, then add some canned tom ato or mushroom sauce w ith a b it of grated onion and alm m er m eat balls fo r 20 minutes. J STEPHEN, THE FIRST CH RISTIAN M A R TY R W A S C O N D EM N E D CONTRARY TO JEW ISH CUSTOM FOR SUCH CASES AN D ALSO AGAINST TH E PROYlSlON T H A T O N LY ROMA;.' AUTHORITIES COULD INFLICT THE DEATH PENALTY. o n NEW Btestone K E EP IN G H E A L T H Y Aiding Lonely Hospital Patients By Dr. James W . Barton E A LL HAVE a great deal of w1 sympathy for the lonely chil dren in various children’s institu tions. I t is hard enough for men and women away from loved ones to have the days and nights pass in loneliness, but a little child w ith out loved ones to com fort him brings an even sadder vision. I have w ritten before about the children’ s hospital in which the ’ nurses “ Cuddled up” little children gar and babies. This soothed the little 14 teaspoon salt ones m entally and physically and % cup cold water helped them to eat and sleep peace- j fully. 1(4 cups finely shredded cab bage I That patients in various m ilita ry % cup minced celery ' hospitals are suffering loneliness •4 cup sliced, stuffed olives was disclosed by a survey Conduct- Dissolve gelatin in boiling water. e(j by the psychiatry and neurology Add vinegars, salt and cold water, division of Veterans’ administra- C hill. When s lig h t-} tion. This was reported in "The ly thickened, fold Journal of the American Medical //— in cabbage, cel- Association.” Of 52,000 mental pa- F _ ^ 6 e ry and olives, tients in V.A. hospitals, one-third Pour Into m divid- have been visited by reith er fam- ual m o l d s o r jily nor friends for a year or more, large mold. C hill i in one hospital only 219 of 785 until firm . Un- patients had had a visitor during mold on greens and serve with de- the previous year. While this seems sired dressing. j ---------------------------------------- ------- — Canned luncheon meat looks more like a roast if you stud it with cloves and brush with equal parts of brown sugar and canned fru it syrup. Bake If a person, attempting to reduce, in a moderate oven for 15 minutes. achieves no weight loss after cut- Cream dried beef and add some | jng ¿¡own on eating and exercising leftover peas to the m ixture. Serve regu]ari yi he should ask his physi- in potato nests or over fried nood- cifjn about drugs to curb his les for a quick supper dish. appetite. . Two for dinner? M ix 14 pound of I • • • bulk sausage with 1 egg, V* cup of Rhuematism causes more dis- m ilk, one tablespoon catsup and 44 a bility and loss of tim e than any cup canned cream style corn. Bake other ailm ent except nervous and in buttered custard cups fo r 30 mental diseases. minutes. terrible neglect on the part of families and friends, It is only too true that some veterans are better off without visitors because there is something, of which the rest of us know nothing, that causes severe disturbances when visitor and pa tient meet. I have written before of a boxer, who had been "knocked out” by blows to the head several times, whom I visited regularly for some years. I was about to get him dis charged from the hospital. He took a job and did well for awhile but finally had to return to the hospital. When I made my next visit, although I was his only vis! tor, I distrubed him and the physi cian in charge of his case agreed that my visits would not help him. Dr. Harvey J. Tompkins, chief of the psychiatry (behavior) and neurology (structure of brain and nerves) division states that while visitors might be disturbing In some Instances, they would be high ly beneficial to the patients In the m ajority of cases. HEALTH NOTES Sometimes after removal of ton sils and adenoids, growths of some tissues sim ilar to tonsils and adenoids occur in the throat. e e e One of the commonest causes of defective hearing Is Impacted wax in the outer ear. Emotional cause asthma disturbances may wstmat • Champions for Mileage Made with Exclusive Firestone Plus-Mileage Tread Rubber« • Champions for Safety B uilt w ith Safti-Lock Gum* Dipped Cord Body to Protect Against Blowouts. • Champions for Non-Skid New Tread Design has 8 Ribs and Thousands of Sharp-Edged Angles to Give Extra Traction. B IG T R A D E -IN A L L O W A N C E FOR Y O U R OLD TIRES SEE YOUR NEARBY FIRESTONE DEALER OR STORE