Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, August 06, 1942, Page 6, Image 6

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    6 Heppner Gazette Times, August 6, 1942
Mrs. America Meets
The War
(Editor's Note: War touches ev
ery home and every citizen. This
column, based on official govern
ment information and prepared by
the Office of War Information, showi
how the war will affect Mrs. Amer
ica and her home.)
With more cheese available for
consumers than ever before, gov
ernment food supply experts are
advising Americans to eat more
cheese.
A year ago it was doubtful whe
ther production of American cheese
could meet the demands for ship
ment abroad. Now, in addition to
the quantities bought by the gov
ernment for feeding our overseas
armed forces and our Allies, civil
ians at home will have plentiful sup
plies for their dinner tables.
The same things that make cheese
an ideal food for shipment abroad,
recommend it for greater use here
at home. Cheese is a concentration
of all the food values that make
milk a "must" in any diet, and can
be used as part of the daily milk al
lowance. Cheese contains the pro
teins needed for building strong
muscles, it has many of the vitamins
and minerals necessary for health
and growth, and is rich in energy
giving fats.
When cheese is plentiful, advised
Mrs. Lamar Tooze, Oregon Con
sumer Relations Representative of
the Office of Price Adnynistration,
the housewife who uses it in her
meals is providing her family with
nourishing food at low cost. "And
she is making a contribution to the
war effort as well, when she buys
food that is abundant rather than
using foods which are more limited
in supply."
Cheese has many uses in the day's
meals. As a main dish, to be used
occasionally instead of meat, Mrs.
Tooze suggested the following re
cipes: Cheese Vegetable Dish
2 cups diced cooked potatoes; 1
cup diced cooked carrots; 1 cup peas;
1 medium onion, finely chopped;
Put vegetables in buttered baking
dish, cover with cheese sauce, set in
a pan of hot water, and heat thor
oughly in a moderate oven.
(Cheese sauce 2 tbsp. butter or
other fat; 2 tbsp. flour; 1 cup milk;
lb. cheese, finely sliced.) Make a
white sauce of butter, flour, and
milk. Add the cheese and stir until
it is entirely melted.
Macaroni Cheese Loaf
1 pkg. macaroni broken into small
pieces; 1 cup soft bread crumbs; 3
eggs slightly beaten; 1 cup milk; 1 '
heaping tbsp. finely chopped pars
ley; 4 tbsp. butter or other fat; 1
cup finely grated cheese; 1 tsp. salt;
1-8 tsp. pepper; 1 tsp. finely chopped
onion. Cook macaroni until tender
in boiling salt water. Drain. Mix
all ingredients together and form in
bread pan. Set in pan of hot water
and bake 1 to IV2 hours in a mod
erate oven. Turn out onto a hot
platter, and cover with cheese sauce.
Cheese With Rice and Tomato
2 cups boiled rice; 1 cup tomato
sauce; 1 cup finely shredded cheese;
butter or other fat. Put a layer of
boiled rice in a well-greased baking
dish. Add a layer of cheese. Alter
nate rice, tomato sauce and cheese
until the baking dish is full. Add
small pieces of butter and cheese
for the top layer. Bake about V2 hour
in a moderate oven.
In addition to its use as a main
dish, cheese adds taste and interest
to other menus and extra nourish
ment at low cost. For the American
war worker a cheese sandwich can
provide that extra energy needed
on the production line. A wedge of
cheese, eaten with another sandwich
or with dessert is also a welcome
addition to the lunchbox.
And for the family at home dur
ing the day, cheese has innumerable
uses grated on salads, in cheese
biscuits, with crackers instead of a
sweet dessert, or as an in-between-meals
snack for the ice-box raider.
Silk stockings are precious items
in milady's wardrobe these days, but
used silk hosiery also has an im
portant use. Government experts
have found a way of turning used
silk hose to the manufacture of
powder bags and other war pur
poses. For some time reclaimed silk
could be used for military products
when it was blended with longer
silk of which there has only been
a limited amount. Experiments con-
vSfoS Vs yT MKa -SZRV Y(Ht IT BURNS IW-OXr 1
' VtfA 3SSHtTyS (1S THE 10W PRKf
You're in for the surprise of your life when
you see and drive the John Deere Model "H"
the sensational new small tractor that handles
two-row equipment and completely replaces
animal power on small and large farms every
where, cutting costs 'way below their former
level, and making farming more' profitable.
And when you learn the price, you'll wonder
how John Deere can give you so much in a tractor
that sells for so little.
In addition, the Model "H" not only burns low
cost fuel but it uses only 13 to 12 as much fuel
on the many jobs within its power range, as would
larger tractors handling the same load.
Come in, see it, and gel "the surprise of your
life."
BRADEN-BELL TRACTOR
& EQUIPMENT CO.
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How to Display Ceiling Prices
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A single poster may show the ceiling prices for a group
of related items -such as meat. The list, should be
printed in letters large enough to be clearly readable
from the point of purchase.
ducted during the past year devel
oped a way of making war products
entirely from discarded stocking
silk. The WPB froze all used silk
hosiery in the hands of dealers, with
minor exceptions, to be reclaimed
for war purposes. However, the
government does not contemplate
a campaign for collecting old stock
ings from the general public.
If you are not able to secure your
usual selection of meat at the but
cher shop during the summer sea
sonal period of meat shortage, don't
complain. Remember that our Arm
ed Forces and those of our Allies
must have the first call on the coun
try's meat supplies. So heed the
advice of Price Administrator Hen
derson to "buy carefully, buy con
servatively and buy less if possible
during the next six weeks." And by
the way, OPA price ceilings on beef,
veal and pork have saved home
makers money. If prices for meats
were unchecked, they might have
gone skyhigh because of competitive
buying foV the remaining supplies
after purchases for the armed forces
and lend-lease.
One of these days everyone may
be walking an extra block or two
to help street cars and busses meet
their wartime transportation prob
lems. Transit companies are being
urged by the Office of Defense
Transportation to reduce the num
ber of stops made by busses and
trolleys. In this may the same fre
quency of service can be provided
depite the use of less equipment on
the line. That means transit com
panies will be able to shift busses
and street cars for needed service
on other lines.
The price you'll pay per can for
soup produced after June 30 will be
a bit higher than the cost of others
on the grocer's shelves. However,
you won't be getting exactly the
ATTACK!
ATTACK!
ATTACK!
America's attacking on both the
righting front and th bom front
today I
We're giving the Axil a bitter
taste of what's to come.
We're righting the inflationary
6th column that blows prices sky
high here at home, too.
And every one of us who saves
it least 10 of his pay in War
Bonds is an Important soldier in
the attack!
Join the attack yourself I
same article because the new pro
duct will conform to the requirements
of the WPB tin conservation order
for additional solids and larger metal-
saving cans. Naturally that cre
ates art increase over March 1942
cost levels in production of canned
soup, and the OPA pricing formula
takes this into consideration. The
new products will have considerably
more food value per ounce than soup
canned prior to June 30. Incident
ally, housewives bought more than
$100,000,000 worth of canned soup
during 1941.
The limited quantity of new wool
available for civilian use doesn't
mean that there will be a shortage
of warm clothing when the winter
months roll around. The WJB con
servation order is intended to stretch
the amount of cloth to be made out
of the limited amount of wool that
is not earmarked for military pur
poses. While the amount of wool
that can go into all-wool fabrics was
decreased there is an increase of the
allotment for mixture with rework
ed or reused wool or cotton or ray
on. Save your waste kitchen fats and
grease to help steer Uncle Sam's
ships . to the fighting fronts. Gly
cerine is derived from waste ltit
. chen greases, and that is what a
ship's compass floats upon. As more
and more Liberty ships slide down
the ways, more and more glycerine
is needed. Since our fat and oil
imports have been cut off because
of war, it's the kitchens of the coun
try to the rescue by salvaging waste
grease for its precious glycerine.
Summertime is not the season that
makes Mrs. America think about
keeping the home fires burning. But
the Office of Defense Transporta
tion has been doing some worrying
about a possible bottleneck in deliv
eries of fuel next fall. You can be
assured of sufficient coal and wood
next winter when the cold winds
blow by ordering it from your deal
er now and storing it for later use.
If your electric range is no longer
usable and cannot be repaired, you
stand a chance of buying one of the
last 45,000 electric ranges in the
country. Likewise before these
stoves were frozen in the hands of
dealers, distributors, and manufac
turers, if you had your home wired
for installing a range and you have
no other cooking equipment, avail
able, you should qualify for one. If
you are in either classification, you
must certify to it in writing to your
dealer. The ranges now offered to
Mrs. America represent the total
available. That's all there is there
won't be any more because produc
tion has been stopped for the duration.
Professional
Directory
Dr. W. H. Rockwell
Naturopathic
Physician & Surgeon
Gilman Bldg.
Office hours: 1 p. m. to 7:30 p. m.
Exam free Ph. 522 Heppner, Or.
Phelps Funeral Home
Licensed Funeral Directors
Phone 1332
Heppner, Ore.
J. 0. Turner
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Phone 173
Hotel Heppner Building
HEPPNER. ORE.
A. D. McMurdo, M. D.
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Trained Nana Assistant
Office In Masonic Building
Heppner. Oregon
Heppner
Abstract Co.
J. LOGIE RICHARDSON, Mgr.
BATES REASONABLE
Roberts Building Heppner. 08.
P. W. Mahoney
ATTORNEY AT LAW
GENERAL INSTTRANCE
Heppner Hotel Building
Willow St Entrance
J. 0. Peterson
Latest Jewelry and Gift Goods
Watches - Clocks Diamonds
Expert Watch and Jewelry
Repairing
Heppner, Oregon
NEW AUTO POLICY
Bodily Injury & Property Damage
Class A $13.60 Class B $17.00
See us before financing your
next automobile.
F. W. TURNER & CO.
Heppner City Council
Meets First Monday Each Month
Citizens having matters for dis
cussion, please bring before
the Council.
J. O. TURNER, Mayor
Dr. L. D. Tibbies
OSTEOPATHIC
Physician ft Surgeon
FIRST NATIONAL BANK BUX1
Rec. Phone 1162 Office Phone 492
HEPPNER, OREGON
Jos. J. Nys
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Peters Building, Willow Street
Heppner, Oregon
Morrow County
Abstract & Title Co.
INC.
ABSTRACTS OF TITLE
TITLE INSURANCE
Office in New Peters Building
M. L. CASE G. E. NIKANDER
Directors of
Funerals
862 Phones 262