Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, February 24, 1933, Page 5, Image 5

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MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MTCDFO'il), OREGON, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1933.
PAGE FIVE
Cheaper Cuts of Meat
Give Satisfaction When
Used by Skillful Cook
By Bureau of Home Economics, U. 8.
Department of Agriculture.
It la comforting to know, especially
nowadays, that the cheaper cuts of
meat are Just as nutritious as the
more expensive ones. The trick Is
to make them taste as good, but that
need not stump the skillful cook,
says the bureau of home economics
of the U. fl. department of agricul
ture. To succeed the cook must know
the cuts, and how to cook them.
Beef and pork are probably the best
meat bargains Just at present. Prices
run as low as 7 and 8 cents a pound
in some localities, for very good meat
Indeed. Even sirloin and porter
house steaks, and prime ribs of beef,
the most expensive cuts, are down
to figures unheard of In normal times.
The leas tender and cheaper beet
steaks are chuck, shoulder, flank,
round, and rump. Chuck ribs, cross
arm, clod, round and rump are the
less tender and cheaper roasts.. The
cheapest beef stew meat Is neck,
plate and brisket, flank, shank and
heel of round. And then there is
soup bone very little meat, but
plenty of flavor.
To cook these cute to the best ad
vantage, says the bureau of home
economics, remember that heat, mois
ture, and long slow cooking are need
ed to make tough meat tender. The
cheaper cuts make good pot roasts,
Swiss steak, or stew, to mention top-of-the-stove
methods, which require
leas fuel than oven-cooking. For oven
dinners, stuffed flank steak, baked
In the oven, or any of the cheaper
cuts In a casserole with vegetables,
are other good ways to use these
low-priced meats. And left-over pot
roast makes good hot roast beef sand
wiches, or brown hash.
In other words, for the less tender
cua of beef, follow these cooking
principles: Sear the meat In a small
quantity of fat until It la browned
this Is to develop flavor; after brown
ing reduce the heat, add a Judicious
amount of water, cover tightly, and
cook slowly until the meat la tender
enough to be cut with a fork. It will
give up a good deal of Juice during
the cooking, but that makes good
gravy, to be served as a part of the
dish. Or cook the meat with toma
toes Instead of water, and give It a
different flavor. With tomatoes, on
ion, and green pepper. It la called
Spanish steak.
Another good way with less tender
meat Is to grind It. Then It can be
cooked In the same way as a tender
steak or roast that Is broiled or pan
brolled, or baked. Ground beef broil
ed on toast, hamburg steak, and beef
loaf are some of the best ways of
using ground beef.
Among the good pork bargains la
sausage. It can be bought In Just
the quantity to serve any sized fam
ily. It has no waste, since any fat
that cooks out can be used In gravy.
It Is easy to cook, and delicious with
fried apples, or with griddle cakes. A
fresh picnic shoulder, boned, and
stuffed, or a platter of stuffed spare
ribs Is also cheap and very satisfying.
Stuffed shoulder, which, on the sec
ond day can be served cold and sliced,
Is one of the best of pork roasts.
The cooking of pork Is simple, says
the bureau. All the cuts are tender.
They must, however, be cooked thor
oughly to the cen-or of the piece
and some precaution Is necessary to
keep the outside from becoming hard
and dry. Sear the surface, and then
cook with moderate heat, but do not
add water. Ham. shoulder, and loin
have enough fat on the outside to
baste the lean meat If roasted fat
Bide -up In an open pan. To prevent
pork chops from becoming hard and
dry, cover them closely after brown
ing, and finish the cooking with
very moderate heat.
LOW COST MENU FOR ONE DAY
Breakfast.
Hot Whole Grain Wheat Top Milk
Toast and Butter
Coffee (adults) Milk (children)
Dinner.
Pot Boast of Beef with Vegetables
Bread and Butter
Coffee and Doughnuts
Milk (children)
Supper.
Cream of Peanut Butter Soup
Cabbage and Pineapple Salad
Buttered Toast
Milk for aU..
RECIPES.
Pot Roast of Beef With Vegetables
Select a piece of beef chuck, rump,
or round weighing 3 to 4 pounds. Sea
son with salt and pepper. Brown the
meat In beef fat, add a small quantity
of water, cover the kettle closely with
a lid, and cook slowly until the meat
Is tender when pierced with a fork.
This will take about 3 hours. Add
onions, carrots, or potatoes during
the last hour of the cooking. To make
gravy, first skim the fat from the
liquid In the pot. For thickening,
allow to each cup of liquid 3 table
spoons of the fat and XVa tablespoons
flour. Mix the fat and flour thor
oughly, add to the meat broth, and
stir over the fire until smooth. Sea
son to taste.
Scrapple.
Select 3 pounds of bony pieces of
ork. Simmer In 3 quarts of water
SAVE
your health and teeth. At
these prices you can afford to
have your dental work done
now.
Extractions as low ff . , f .50
Silver Fillings as low as 1.00
Cement Fillings as tow as. 1.00
Porcelain Fillings u low as 1.00
Gold Crowns as low , , , 5.00
Plates as tow ss-.13.00
DR. E. D. COE
404 Medford Center Bldg.
until the meat drops from the bone.
Strain off the broth, remove the
bones, taking care to get out all the
tiny pieces, and chop the meat fine.
There should be about 2 quarts of
broth, and If necessary add water to
make this quantity. Bring the broth
to the boiling point, slowly stir in
3 cups of corn meal or 3 cups of
cracked wheat, cook for about 30 min
utes and stir frequently. Add the
chopped meat, salt, and any other sea
soning, such as a little sage or thyme.
Pour the hot scrapple Into bread
pans which have been rinsed with
cold water. Let st$nd until cold and
firm, slice, and brown slowly In a hot
skillet. If the scrapple Is rich with
fat, no more fat Is needed for fry
ing. Sausage and Fried Apples.
Fry sausage until brown and crisp,
drain on absorbent paper, and keep
hot. Leave about 4 tablespoons of
the sausage fat In the skillet. Mean
while slice or quarter apples. Wav
ing the skins on. Fill the skillet
with the apples, sprinkle on 3 or 4
tablespoons of sugar, cover, and cook
slowly until the apples are tender.
Then remove the cover, turn the ap
ples gently so the pieces will hold
their shape, and let them brown and
continue to cook slowly until they
become almost transparent. Serve
the fried apples on a hot platter with
the sausage.
VETS TO REUNE'
Saturday night, tomorrow, former
members of the 65th and 60th, now
residing In Eugene, will be hosts to
as many former members of the out
fits as can be present, according to
Invitation received here.
Anyone In Medford Interested l.i
making the trip is asked to get In
touch with Walter Olmscheld, adjut
ant of the Medford American Legion.
The invitation comes from the 65th
C. A. C. association, "Farthest to
Fight," with headquarters In Port
land. Quite a party Is planned, It
promises, and a large attendance Is
anticipated.
Lava Cornerstone.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 24. (P)
Placing the cornerstone of the new
department of Justice building, Presi
dent Hoover Thursday spoke his belief
that "democracy oan hope to endure
only to the degree that It can find
the means of enforcement of Its own
laws."
Oregon Weather.
Increasing cloudiness followed by
rain west portion and snow and rain
east portion -late tonight or Satur
day; no change In temperature;
southerly winds, becoming of gale
force offshore.
"No can of Hills Bros. Coffee
will ever , "go stale." The
vacuum can keeps it
FRESH ALWAYS!
Aged Veteran Joins Legion!
-Mf,!4 fin
This Is a storv about "Old Jim." one of the most faithful veterans who
has ever served the Stars and Stripes. He was dismissed from the service
because of age, without provision for the future, but the American Legion
took notice of him and has now made tfte grizzled old veteran an object of
Interest wherever he may go.
I
E
OF RECALL ABUSE
(Continued irom Page One)
out to get some of nas. They pur
sue him even onto the fire escape,
where many a good lobbyist has taken
a bad case of flu rather than sur
render a good talking point.
No wonder, then, that some other
wise well-meaning lobbyists have
fallen Into the degrading practice of
directing the attention of the gold
digger to the evasive legislator, there
by killing two birds with one stone.
A resolution was introduced today,
relative to the seating arrangements
of delegations for the next session of
the legislature two years hence. One
legislative wag said the only sugges
tion he had to make was that the
stenographers' chairs be removed,
leaving them no other alternative
than to sit on the floor or their
bosses' knees.- "This would be an In
centive' aald he, "for legislators to
choose better-looking stenographers."
The Senator Goss Washington's
birthday speech before the house this
afternoon was a good talking point
for the Beck man beer bill and the
parl-mutual measure now before the
legislature.
He said Washington, If he lived
today, would not drink wet and vote
dry. Washington, he said, always
had a cellar full of good liquor, and
that It was a matter of historic rec
ord that he Indulged In frequent
gambling games and bet on horse
races. '
"This did not deter him from be
ing the country's most loved presi
dent and best citizen."
Senator Goss said he merely cited
these facts from the first President's
life to emphasize the changing view
If griddle cakes don't get an even heat, they'll be leathery and pale In placetburned
almost black In other places soggy in other places. Fluffy, golden-Uin, tender griddle
cakesneedaneven, steady heat on both sides. You couldn't get that mthacandlel
Nothing but an even distribution of heat will
cook food or roast coffee to uniform perfection.
In Hills Bros.' exclusive process Controlled Roast
ingeven distribution of heat is assured. As the
blend flows evenly, continuously through the roasters
a little at a time a constant degree of heat roasts
every berry alike. There is no variation. Each pound
has the same matchless, uniform flavor.
Such uniformity in flavor cannot be achieved in
coffee roasted in bulk the ordinary way. It is impossi
ble to roast each batch alike, and as a result there is
variation in flavor.
If you would like proof of the popularity of Hills
Brds. Coffee, consider this it outsells all other brands
between the Pacific Coast and Chicago! Try Hills Bros.
. Coffee. Order some today, by name, and look for the
Arab trade-mark on the can.
GROl'.VD niGHT TO TASTE ItlGEIT
Wits Bros, Coffee Is correctly ground, for best results by drip
, process or any other method.
point through the years, and to
soften prejudices In regard to lead
ers In today's politics.
' "The greatest need of the present
day, both in our economic and polit
ical life Is tolerance of others' view
points," he said.
Although Washington's birthdav
wasn't a legislative holiday, 14 out of
60 members of the house were absent
this afternoon.
Sweetly -scented ladles, with per
fect permanents and well-blended
complexions, wander through , the
hells these days. They are lobbyists
on both sides of the oosmetlclans
bill recently Introduced by Repre
sentatives Frank Lonergan and Har
vey Wells. Representing the oper
ators and the beauty college head-,
there is need for competition in the
make-up of these feminine persuad
ers. . There Is now complaint among the
more sensitive solons In both houses
and senate that the noise down in
Jackson county Is too loud to allow
them to think. They have requested
members of the press to "shush" the
racket, at least until the present ses
sion is over.
Prink Callison, former Medford
high school coach, was the hero of
the hour out In the lobby at noon
today, as he was discovered and sur
rounded by a large crowd of Uni
versity of Oregon football fans. While
here he shook hands with one of his
predecessors on the Oregon gridiron.
"Shy" Huntington, now a member of
the house of representatives.
Members of the house usually
smoke cigarettes, when they can
"bum" them off the newspapermen
In the lobby. (Even the governor
does this, occasionally.) But sena
tors are different. To a man, the
upper house men puff big, black,
long cigars. As to the brand, or
whether they pay for them them
selves, that's another question. But
cigars have a senatorial dignity that
cigarettes somehow lack.
Some of the lobbyists, it Is said,
are so Inexperienced that they have
their brief cases filled with papers.
'yif .
Delightful Trips Await
Popularity Prize Winners
Free From AH Expense
Here are the brief highlights of the
two delightful vacation trips which
will be the goal of Medford misses
who are entered In the Merchants-
Tribune popularity contest. Although
words will not describe these wo mar
velous trips, here Is a description that
will give a modest Idea of the two
cruises.
The winner of first prize and the
coveted title of "Miss Medford" will
go from Medford to Seattle, where
she will stop at the Olympic hotel.
From that northwest metropolis she
will board a fine ocean liner for a
splendid six-day voyage to Uncle
Sam's lovely Island territory, Hawaii.
Long years ago, on the spot where
once Hawaiian kings held court in
a grove of cocoa palms, bordering Wal-
klkl beach, stands the Royal Hawai
ian hotel, and farther along the beach
Is the Moana hotel, with its famous
banyan courtyard.
Here Miss Medford will make her
home for nine luxurious days In the
entrancing Hawaiian Islands. The
service to be given her could not be
tendered this same ancient royalty
In a more attentive manner. Silent
footed retainers anticipate her every
wish. Her room Is luxuriously ap
pointed, and the quiet calm of this
fair haven will be delightfully restful.
In this strange, different city, from
sunrise to sunset, skies change with
the minutes; rainbows float above the
valleys; the sea sends forth opales
cent hues; every bit of nature vies to
lend color to the atmosphere. Ro
mance, calm and peace are In the air.
A trip to the city, with Its placid
composure, Its simplicity and genu
lneneas, Intrigues and excites. Here
you find a bit of San Francisco or
New York, and generous touches of
the South Seas an occidental atmos
phere t under western Influence.
Everywhere you go you hear the
soft speech of the kindly, lovable In
habitants of native Hawaii. Cere
monials recalling olden times are per
formed; the authentic hula Is still
to be witnessed; melting melodies of
the Isles hold listeners spellbound;
ExtLra
SoJ
Saturday Only
Ward's
'Superfine"
Brand
They're Ward's famous superflns
Shlrtj! . . . and If we do say so our
selves, they offer a "whale of a lot
of ahlrt" for the money. Ward's had
more than 250.000 of them nude at
rVhite
one clip but we
Tan Blue m ordering that
these fine shirts won't stay In our
stocks very long. Notice how exact
ing we were In our specifications
then come and see them for yourself.
You II went to stock up with at least
half a dozen.
Gray
MONTGOMERY
WARD & CO.
groups of serenading Hawaiian youths
accompanying their singing with uke-
leles and steel guitars, stroll In the
evening along the beaches and under
the palms.
Romantic memories of departed
royalty linger for at the Iolanl pal
ace In Honolulu Is "the only throne
room within the American borders."
A visit to the aquarium at Walklkl
leaves you bewildered and perplexed
Every nook and corner of this beau
tiful old city Is crammed full of In
terest and excitement and Intrigue.
Every minute of every hour of every
day is filled to capacity, and still one
wonders and exclaims 1
BILL IS ADVOCATED
WASHINGTON. Feb. 34. (ff) An
other farm relief bill th! one- to
consolidate all federal farm and home
loaning activities Into a H00.000.000
government "Farm and Home Credit
corporation" waa Introduced by
Senator DM (D.. Wash.), who aald
he would press for consideration In
the extra session.
SACRAMENTO, Cel., Feb. 34. WP)
J. P. Shepard of Stockton, Cal., bid
ding $85,909, was announced by the
partment of public works Thursday
as low bidder for grading ana sur
facing 8.9 miles on the Weed-Dorrls-
Klamath Falls lateral, between Dorrls
and the Oregon state line.
4
Broken windows glazed by
rrowbrldge Cabinet Works.
Specnall
MEN'S FINE
w.
, Collar
Attached
Style
Sizes
14 to 17
took no undue risks
many because it 800
KMED
Broadcast Schedule
Saturday.
8:00 Breakfast News, Mall Tribune.
8:05 Musical Clock.
8:15 A Peerless Parade.
8 :30 Shopping Oulde.
9:00 Friendship Circle.
9:30 Today.
9:45 Shoppers' Tour.
10:00 U. 8. Weather Forecast
10:00 Schubert's Love Songs.
10:30 Morning Comments.
10:45 Martial Music.
11:00 Neapolitan Night
11:15 Morning Melody.
11:30 Song and Comedy.
13:00 Mid-day Review.
13:15 Popularity.
13:30 News Flashes by Mail Tribune.
1:00 Patriotic Program.
1:18 Varieties.
1 :30 Oregon Ramblers.
3:00 Dance Matinee.
3:00 Songs for Everyday.
3:30 KMED Program Review.
3:35 Chandu Review.
4:30 Across the Seas to Hawaii.
8:00 Popular Parade.
5:48 News Digest, Mall Tribune.
8:00 Medford Theater Qulde.
6:05 -Andy Slough, Entertainer.
6:30 Dinner Dance Music
7:00 Harwood Boys.
7:15 Eventide.
7:45 to 8:30 Your Favorite Dance
Bands.
4
PORTLAND, Feb. 34. () Funeral
services were held here today for
Branston J. Miles, 83. the first sup
erintendent of the Oregon reform
school for boys. He died at his home
here Tuesday.
MEN! Save on
WOEICC
CLOTHING
AT WARD'S . . . .
Winr. PIONEER,
OVERALLS
74c
If Ward's dldnt sell such terrific- vol.
urns "Pioneers" could never sell for
74o. Strong denim, all strain points
bar-tacked, triple seams, rust-proof
buttons, oversize for perfect comfort.
Choice of high back or low back style,
. , . regular or large sizes.
Boys' Pioneer Overalls
55c
Ward's "PIONEER"
1 -PIECE SUIT
S1.98
Mechanics, garage men, service sta
tion men . . . tell us these husky,
strong-ss-lron denim, c&n't wear out I
Full alee, easy and comfortable to get
Into, Regular or large size.
Ward's "Homesteader"
Work Shirts 39c
Of (Ins chambray, triple stitching,
reinforced for long wear; a double
yoke lined collar and ouffs. Sizes
UV, to 17.
Stone King Triple-Wear
Work Shoes s239
t soles. Double cowhide grain leath
er uppers. Barnyard proof. Metal
ring around heel. Heavy leather in
sole. Size 6 to 13.
MEN'S
Work Shoes
SI .98
Strong black mocca
sin toe blucher shoe
nailed and. sewed
for long steady wear.
Sizes 6 to U. Wide
width. Composition
sole.
CANVAS
Work Gloves
10c
Ward's beet sellers,
msde of finer canvas,
with extra weight, ex
tra strength, extra
Talus'.
MONTGOMERY
WARD & CO.
EOF
WASHINGTON. Feb. 33. (AP)
James C. Stone, chairman of th
farm board, today submitted his res
ignation to President Hoover and re
ceived from blm an acceptance.
BAKING
POWDER.
SAME PRICE
AS 42 YEARS AGO.
25ounfor25.:
Double ie r t J
MEN'S
Work Pants
98c
Pull cut, bar tacked
at points of strain:
moleskin or whip
cord, strong cotton
pants. Sizes 30 to 44
waist.
Cprrllif 193B TJItt BrM.
UILLS BROS COFFEE
117 S. Central
Phone 286
Medford, Oregon
117 S. Central
Phone 286
Medford, Oregon