Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, December 29, 1933, Page 7, Image 7

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    MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, 1IEDFORD, OREGON. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1933.
PAGE SEVEN
RETAIL SALES OF
NEW YORK, Deo. 29. Tj Follow
ing tha best volume of Christmas
buying Alnce 1W8 In many districts,
business was further stimulated In
the past week by fresh merchandise
demands Incident to the widespread
wintry weather. Dun & Bradstreet
uld In their weekly trade review to
day. Most of the reports received during
the week, asserted the review, stressed
the substantial gains of most trade
branches over their comparative fig
ures of 1933.
"Cheerfulness over the outlook,"
said the report, "is especially marked
in country districts where the steady
flow of checks to farmers cooperating
with the AAA In the crop adjustment
program has pushed buying power
ahead.
"Largely disregarding seasonal in
fluences, the leading industrial in
dices display a heartening stability
for the close of the year. The lull
in retail buying which usually sets
in immediately following Christmas
waa not marked this year. Sales of
textiles were stimulated by the spec
ial offerings of sheets, pillow-cases,
table linens and towels, but the
greater volume centered on the regu
lar lines of women's coats and dresses.
"With retailers' sales larger than
expected during the post-Christmas
week, the substantial reduction of
stocks increased orders received by
wholesalers for immediate, shipment
of ready-to-wear clothing, winter
sports goods, automobile accessories,
foodstuffs and many items in the
staple dry goods line."
KMED
Broadcast Schedule
Saturday
A. M.
8:00 Breakfast News, Mall Tribune.
8:05 Musical Clock.
8:16 Peerless Parade.
8:30 Shopping Guide.
9:00 Friendship Circle Hour.
9:30 Morning Melody.
9:46 Schubert's Love Songs.
10:46 Hollywood Impressions.
10:30 Musical Notes.
11:00 Grants Pass Hour.
11:16 Marching Along Together.
11:46 Tone Pictures. .
P. M.
13:00 Mid-day Revue. '
12:10 Chamber ol Commerce News.
13:15 Esther Merrltt Sanderson.
12:30 News Flashes, Mall Tribune.
12:30 Songs of Today,
1 :00 Varieties.
3:00 Classified Edition of the Air.
3:00 Songs for Everyday.
3:30 KMED Program Review.
3:35 Memories.
4:00 Musical Cocktail.
4:30 Masterworks Program.
6:00 Cecil and Sally.
6:16 Hllo Serenaders.
6:30 The Responsibility of Chris
tianity. 6:46 News Digest, Mall Tribune.
6:00 Medford Theater Guide.
6:16 Dinner-Dance Program.
6:46 Holly-Time.
7:00 Anson Weeks' Orchestra.
7:15 The Arkansas Kid. ,
7:30-8:00 Eventide.
Meteorological Report
December 29, 1033.
Forecasts.
Medford and vicinity: Unsettled,
with occasional light rain tonight and
Saturday. No change In temperature.
Oregon: Unsettled, with occasional
light rain tonight and Saturday. No
change In temperature.
Local Data.
Temperature a year ago today:
Highest, 43; lowest, 36.
Total monthly precipitation, 1.98
Inches.
Deficiency for the month, .77
Inches.
Total precipitation since September
1, 1933, 3.45 inches.
Deficiency for the season, 3.64
Inches. '
. Relative humidity at 5 p. m. yea
tsrday, 66 per cent; 5 a. m. today, 59
per cent.
Tomorrow: Sunrise, 7:39 a. m.
Sunset, 4:49 p. m.
Observations Taken at 5 A. M. ,
130th Meridian Time
- i us
1 1 1 f f ? i
34 -16 T
- 62 30
Boston
Cheyenne .
Chicago ..
Rurrka ..
Helena
Los Angeles
MEDFORD -
New Orleans
w York
Omaha ....
Phoenix
Portland
Reno .
Roseburg
14 8
60 54
36 28
, 60 48
58 49
60 92
Salt Lake .
Ban Francisco
Seattle
Spokane
Walla Walla
Washington, DC.
. 73 44
. -.. 40
. 60 48
. 92 90
.98 36
54 50
46 46
40 34
30 26
32 10
Clear
Clear
.02 Cloudy
.26 Cloudy
Cloudy
P. Cdy.
.01 Cloudy
Cloudy
Clear
P. Cdy.
Clear
.56 Cloudy
Cloudy
,!8 Cloudy
P. Cdy.
.46 Rain
.68 Rain
21 cloudy
Cloudy
Clear
Eggs Important Factor
In Diet Throughout Year
By the Bureau of Home Economics,
U, 8. Department of Agriculture
This Is not the season when eggs
are cheapest, but there is no season
when eggs are not Important, espe
cially If the family supplies are low
in other foods. It Is most fortu
nate, then, that the government Is
about to provide, at this very time
of year, a vast amount of eggs for
the people who .have not the means
for getting food for themeselves.
Can you imagine what 15,000,000
dozen eggs would look like? By the
end of January that many will have
been distributed free to the needy
people of this broad land 600,000
cases, 30 dozen to the case pur
chased by the government in the
egg centers of the different states
and distributed to families on the
relief rolls everywhere in the coun
try. The general public, of course, will
not receive any of the relief supply
of eggs. But the government's pur
chase serves to emphasize the im
portance of this particular food in
any low-cost diet. It is good news,
especially for the children In the
families to whom the eggs will be
distributed, for, next to milk, eggs
are the best all-around food for chil
dren. Even the family with the smallest
food budget should try to get ft few
eggs every week for the children,
says the Bureau of Home Economics
of the U. S. Deartment of Agricul
ture. The bureau suggesting a low
cost weekly market list for a family
of five, slips In two eggs apiece for
three children and two more for
father and mother, as a minimum.
A very limited supply, this J so lim
ited that it may be well to see how
much can be done with the fewest
number of eggs In s. week.
The point Is, of course, to make
the most of the food value of the
eggs, and at the same time get the
full benefit of their fine cooking
qualities. Probably they are storage
eggs, because new-laid eggs cost more.
But storage doesn't affect the food
value, so our problem Is to make the
most attractive dishes with our Uni
ted egg supply which comes down
to five eggs after we .have taken out
the baby's share. He gets three, one
for every other day or so.
Five eggs, then, for two adults
and two children. One egg may very
well go into spoon corn bread for
one day in the week. Or into oat
meal muffins, or grahams, or plain
wheat muffins. With another we
can make French toast for breakfast
one day, or corn fritters or French
toasted sandwiches or rice croquettes
for supper. One egg is enough to
make cottage pudding, or a pumpkin
or squash pie, or gingerbread, or
chocolate drop cookies, or peanut
butter cup cakes, or, Instead of cot
tage pudding, a plain one-egg cake
to be served hot.
With three eggs left we can make
an omelet with a little chipped beef,
or crisped salt pork, or bacon, or
ham. Or we can make a spinach
souffle or a rice omelet. That will
use all three eggs at once. Or three
eggs, hard cooked, sliced and cream
ed with plenty of cream sauce, could
be made enough for a meal for four.
Spacing out the three eggs, we
might make an Inexpensive cooked
salad dressing with one egg, or may
onnaise dressing with one of the
yolks. That leaves the white for
icing some cup cakes. With the oth
er two eggs we could make a bread
pudding, or a cream pie.
Nutritionists recommend eggs for
children as a supplement to milk
but not as a substitute, because nei
ther the white nor the yolk of the
egg contains much calcium. For
that, miuk is the richest source. The
calcium of the egg Is nearly all in
the arell. But eggs are valuable for
the same food substances that we
find in lean meat namely proteins,
minerals and vitamin O. They are
valuable also for vitamins A and D,
which are not abundant In meat,
though they are abundant In oily
fis.h. Eggs are. In fact, one of the
few good food sources of vitamin D.
which must be present, with cal
cium, and phosphorus, in order to
keep the children's bones in healthy
growing condition and to prevent
rickets.
MENU FOK ONE DAT
Breakfast
Mush and Milk Toast
Tomato Juice for youngest child
Coffeee (adults) Milk (children)
" Dinner
8houlder Pork Chops
Mashed Potatoes and Gravy
Panned Kale Bread and Butter
Milk for Children
Supper
Corn Fritters
Rye Bread and Butter
, Stewed Apple
RECIPES
Corn Fritters
VA cups sifted soft wheat flour,
a teaspoons baking powder.
teaspoon salt.
1 cup liquid, either Juice from
from canned corn or milk, or
the two mixed.
1 egg.
1 cup drained canned com.
1 tablespoon melted fat.
Mix the flour, baking powder and
salt. Mix the Juice from the canned
corn, or milk, or whatever liquid Is
used, the egg after it .has been beat
en slightly, and the canned corn.
Stir this liquid mixture gradually
Into the dry ingredients. Add the
melted fat. tf the corn is very"
moist, even after the liquid has been
drained from it, more flour may be
needed. Dried corn which has been
soaked and cooked until tender may
also be used.
Fry the corn fritters In deep fat
or, if preferred, In a skillet in shal
low fat. The fritters need time to
cook through to the center before
the outside becomes too brown. Drain
the fritters on absorbent paper fend
serve hot.
French -toasted Sandwiches
Make a' plain bread and cheese
sandwich, dip It in a mixture of
egg and milk (1 egg to a cup of
milk), and brown it slowly on both
sides In fat. Serve piping hot, on
a hot plate.
Any sandwich filling may be used
Instead of cheese chopped meat, or
mixtures made from left-over vege
tables or meats.
Peanut Butter Cup Cakes
2 tablespoons butter or other
fat.
2 tablespoons peanut butter.
cup sugar.
1 egg
1 cups sifted flour.
yA teaspoon salt.
2 teaspoons baking powder.
cup milk.
Cream the butter or other fat and
peanut butter, add sugar gradually,
and egg well beaten. Mix and sift
flour, salt and baking powder, and
add alternately with milk to first
mixture. Bake in greased muffin
pa nsabout 25 minutes In a moderate
oven.
Arguments were under way today
before Circuit Judge H. D. Norton
on a motion to set aside the Judg
ment In the case of the Columbia
Paper Mills Co. against W. H. Ar
nold, who contends through his
counsel, Don Newbury, he has no
legal Involvement in the proceedings
The Columbia Paper Mills Co. sued
members of the Medford Pear asso
ciation for approximately 93000.
naming 28 defendants, of whom Ar
nold was one. Tne association was
one of the organizations formed by
L. A. Banks. The defense contended
that the fruit wrapping paper was
ordered by Banks in the name of
the organization ana used ty Banks
in his private operations. It was
further held that the act of an of
flcial was not binding upon an or
ganization's members.
The present action is one of sev
eral arising from the paper trans
action and Is highly involved.
Musical Revue Opens at Holly Saturday
v, Hv M V ti V V x If
r 1 '
"Foot light Parade," an extravaganza of lovely girls and brilliant cinema stars, makes Its debut for Holly
rans tomorrow. In addition to 300 beautiful girls, "Footllght Parade" boasts a fine cast headed by James Cag
ney, Ruby Keeler, Dick Powell, Joan Blondell, Frank McHugh and Guy Klbbee.
Presbyterians
To Watch Old
Year Make Exit
Sunday at 11:15 p. m., a New Tear
watch night service will be held In
the First Presbyterian church. This
service will take the place of the
regular Sunday evening worship and
will be a worship hour and watch
night service combined.
From 11:16 to 12 p. m. the regular
worship period will be enjoyed and
after midnight the congregation will
retire to the church parlors where
friendships will be made and re
newed and Christian fellowship en
Joyed. Refreshments will be served.
The evening meeting will be In
charge of the young people of the
church and an Inspiring worship pro
gram has been arranged. Speakers
for the evening will be Keith P. Sieg
fried and Lloyd W. Nicholson, both
members of the young people's so
ciety. Nicholson will discuss "The
Old Tear." Siegfried will bring a
message on "Resolutions for the New
Tear."
The newly formed young peoples'
orchestra will accompany the singing
and the young peoples' oholr. The
scripture reading, prayer and usher
ing will all be performed by members
of the young people's society.
Everyone is Invited to attend this
watch-night service and all will be
welcome. Come and start the New
Tear right in God's House with
God's people.
The city tax on real estate In
Amarillo, Tex., was reduced 22 per
cent this year.
Broken windows glazed by
Trowbridge Cabinet Works.
Real estate or insurance leave It
to Jones. Phone 606.
THREE FATALITIES IN
SALEM, Ore., Dec. 29. (AP) Three ,
fatalities and 293 accidents were re- ,
ported In Oregon the past week by-i
the workmen's compensation depart-!
ment.
Robert McBrlde of Portland, an
executive; B. E. Caldwell of Portland, ;
a foreman, and John Schlehuber of
Albany, a painter, were the fatalities.
BRAWL AT MARCOLA !
PROBED BY POLICE i
KUQENK. Ore., Dec. 29. (UP) '
SUte police are investigating an al-
leged drunken brawl at Marcola late j
Wednesday that sent one man to a j
hospital with critical skull Injuries, j
Bill Benner. Msrcola pool hall pro- :
prletor. was being treated for his In-
juries at a hospital here. j
For Your New Years Dinner
Beck's Are Offering
1
-v PAN ROLLS
t" WHITE OR WHOLE WHEAT
f 'yiJyVT1,''y (wrapped In clear wan paper)
J 5c package
Mince Pies
1 7c each
WHOLE WHEAT
Chocolate Covered
DONUTS
21c dozen
Let Beck's bake your New Year's Cake
On Sale Saturday at your favorite
food store or
BECK'S JAKERY
NEW LOW PRICES ON
Here Is Our New Schedule of Oil
05
Prices
Orankcase 2 to 4 Gala. Per Gal. in
Per Drain Bulk 6-gallon
Quart Per Gal. Per Gal. Bulk
PennzoU, Shell, Penn and 3QC 96C 96C 85c
Lion Head Motor Oil
30c 96c 96c 85c
Golden Shell and Havoline 30c 96c 96c 85c
Texacootor Oil and 25c 85c 85c "70
sheii Motor, oil 25c 80c 80c 50c
Gilmore Westoil 5c 54c 54c 40c
H! 'and Quaker State 3()c $1.20 $1.15 $1.10
35c $1.40 $1.40 $1.25
Transport 7Kr 70r
100 Pure Pennsylvania inc'nT in'
Lewis Super Service Station
"WE NEVER CLOSE" Eighth and Front Next to Hotel Jackson-Phone 1300
PEOPLE'S MARKET
105 W. Main
Free Delivery
Phone 1068
Make a New Year's resolution to buy your meal
at the People's Market ... We sell only high grade
locally produced meats at real bargain prices!
Steaks 12c lb.
Round, Rib or Loin
Veal Steak or Chops 12i lb.
Pot Roast Beef 8c lb.
Boiling Meat 6c lb.
Hamburger, 3 lbs. for 25c
IP
Hams 17c lb
Sugar cured.
Smoked Picnics 12c lb.
Large Fat Hens 19c lb.
0. W. NICHOLS, Proprietor
HOME OWNED STORES
Standing on the threshold of a new year, may we express
our appreciation for your patronage and support during
1933.
It is our sincere wish that you and yours may enjoy a full
measure of health and happiness throughout the new year.
Phone 9 Free Delivery
COFFEE
Maxwell House
27'
OXYDOL
Large package
21
SUGAR
8 pounds
38
Water Tumblers
4 for . '
19-
CHEESE
Full Cream. Lb.
12
PUZZLES
Jig Saw. 3 for
25
MARGARINE
Dinner Bell. 3 for
25'
SOAP 00
Liberty White. 10 bars . . Zj(
SOUP
Campbell's Tomato. 4 cans ,
25-
Snider 's COCKTAIL SAUCE
French's MUSTARD
Baker's COCOANUT
LOBSTER
FRUIT for Salad, No. 1 tall....
Honeysuckle SYRUP
15t
Jar 10
.JA lb. pkg. 15
..yi size can 29
2 cans 35
Pt. Jug 19
Lg. Cal. Grape Fruit.
Sweet Potatoes
Cranberries .
.4 for 25c
,6 lbs. 25c
.2 lbs. 25c
MEAT MARKET
206 E. Main.
Free Delivery.
.Tel. 46
Let's all Join in making this com
munity more prosperous in 1934.
We do our part by featuring high
grade meats produced in the
Rogue River valley.
TURKEYS FINE POULTRY
MEATS
12V2C
LAMB ROAST
shoulder cuts, lb.
BEEF POT ROAST
Lb.
8c
BEEF SHORT RD3S
Lb.
6c
PORK ROASTS.
Shoulder Puts. Lb.
12c
SMOKED PICNICS
Sugar cured. Lb.
10c
HAMS
Mild sugar cured, lb.
17c
BACON
Home sugar cured, lb. ...
17c
LARD
S lbs
25c
SMOKED SAUSAGE
Country style, smoked in muslin, lb.
18c
Fine assortment of Fresh Fish, Oysters. Also: Pickles,
Cheese, Sauerkraut for the holidays.