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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 26, 1934)
MEDFORP MAIL TttrBTTXE, BEDFORD, OREGON. FRIDAY. JANUARY 26. 133. PAOE ELEVEN TRUSTEE EXPLAINS' Dogs Here, There, Everywhere But Room, Says Expert, for ore L BE NEW YORK. Jan. 28. Speaking ol the use to which the endowment fund tor Warm Spring Foundation for Infantile Paralysis would be put, Keith Morgan, chairman of the fin nnce commute of the foundation and treasurer of the national committee for the birthday ball for the presi dent, said: "As 'trustee of the Georgia Warm Springs Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, the national committee for the birthday ball of the president i has aked me to define briefly what would be done with an endowment fund for Warm Springs. The foun dation, established in 1026 by Presi dent Roosevelt, has so far treated patients from cery state In the. tin? ion nnd the possessions. Seventy five per cent of all patients at Warm Springs receive help from the pa tients' aid fund either wholly or partly. So far 65 important hospit als throughout the country have es tablished phytotherapy treatments based on the experience and plans which they obtained wlt.h the aid of the foundation. "Today many leading orthopedic surgeons, many of them nre on .'.e foundation's advisory staff, perform Infantile operations without cost, then sending the patients to Warm Springs for convalescence. Warm Springs, through Its department of education, is now carrying on a na tionwide effort to arouse the coun try to the seriousness of infantile paralysis. The national patients' committee, operating out of "Warm Springs, is doing similar work. "The foundation works closely with the Rockefeller Foundation and every year furnished voluntary blood for experimentation with serum. As soon as the national birthday ball of January 30 Is over, and if the finan cial success is everything we hope it will be, the foundation, under, the leadership of the president, plans to central alze and co-ordinate all other factors in the national crusndc against Infantile paralysis. "Sine all of this is hard work and the problems many, we need help because infantile paralysis is some thing which may affect Individuals or your entire community at any time. They must be prepared. Warm Springs is not interested In using the endowment for wide expansion or physical properties. We are In terested wholely in what the money will do for human value. Warm Springs is non-profit making, non cecetarlan and has no linos of social distinction. Every worthy case is given equal consideration.' 4 rhlmp Was Fire Fighter. HOUSTON, Tex. (UP) Bubbles. blR chimpanzee, has qualified for the flre-flghting brigade at Hermann Park Zoo. Someone tossed Bubbles . a .match. - He struck at and ignited straw in his cage.. When R. L. Mills, assistant zoo-keeper, rushed In to fight the flames, Bubbles began slap ping and stomping the blazing straw. The "market1' for good rings In the United States Is still far from the saturation point, says an expert on rani ni perfection. And the small dog, including the wire-haired fox terrier (center), Pekingese (lower lelt), "Srottie" (upper left), Cairn (upper rlfiht) and Seatyham (lower right,) continues most popular. By JOHN SRLBY NEW YORK (p) Dogs are "on the up and up" In this country, believes Percy Roberts, one of the best known experts in the United States, although an Englishman by birth. "You might think, driving through the east, that there Isn't room for any more good dogs than there are at present," he added. "But you'd be wronsf. There's plenty of room In the east, and many other sections of the country are just starting." Although, he explains, there is a great Interest in good dogs and many important shows west of the Alle rgenics, California is particularly "sold" on dogs of breeding. Small !ogs Favored. Small dops have the edge, and for obvious reason. Mr. Roberts declares. "I Imagine the four most popular breeds, at present, would be the wire haired fox terrier, the 'Scottle,' the Cairn and the Welsh terrier,' he says. "The wire Is a little dog of the chorus girl type, extremely gay. in telligent and unpredictable. The Scot tie, is, by comparison, a sober little Judge: The Cairn is a little like both and the Welsh, perhaps a little more reserved than the wire, Is like a small-sized Airedale. "Of course the Sealyham Is highly popular, but it requires so fnueh care that for physical reasons it does not interest quite so many people who want a dog purely for a companion Spaniels maintain about the same level of popularity year after year." There Is a reason why England la still regarded as the source of more good dogs than any other land, Mr. Roberts believes. He Just had re turned from a scouting expedition there, bringing with him 1 1 dogs worth many thousands of dollars. England Still Leads. "It is because English breeders have patience." he insists. "We want our dogs produced perfect, right on the spot. The average English breeder will contentedly work years to pro duce a fine dog; he enjoys the work as well as the result' The dog market (there Is a dog market quite as much as any other, although not a formal one) has not suffered disproportionately from the depression, and showa signs of Im provement that match the general situation, says Mr. Roberts. dreams which a:e plain cheese miicI. wiches browned in fat are quick and easy ways to provide a substantial lunch or supper dish. LOW-COST MENU TOR ONE PAY Hrcikfiist. Cereal (cracked wheat! Toast Tomato Juice for youngest child Coffee (adults) Milk (children) IHmier. Scalloped CaoiMge, Spaghetti and Cheese Stewed Apricots Cornbrcad Milk for children Supper. Hashed Brown Potatoes Stewed Tomatoes Bread and Butter Milk for all . E AFTER SEA RECIPES Tomato ltahlilt. 3 tablespoons butter other fat '2 small onion, chopped 3 tableApona flour 'i pound chee.se, shaved thin Salt and pepper 1 pint canned tomatoes Cook the onions In the fat for a few minutes and stir in the floin.i Gradually add the tomatoes and cook j until the mixture thickens. Add thai cheese, stir until It melts, and keen t the heat very low. Season to taste with salt and pepper, and serve at! once on crisp toast or crackers. A quick way to make this rabbit Is to use canned tomato soup, in stead of the canned tomatoes, which must be thickened. In this caw, brown the onion In a little fat. a:ld the tomato soup, and when hot add the cheese. Stir until the cheese is melted and the mixture smooth. Use a 10 -ounce can of soup to i pound of cheese, or more cheese If desired. This dish Is often called "rtngtum diddy." Scalloped Cabbage, Spaghetti and Cheese. 1!4 cups spaghetti, broken in small pieces 3 tablespoons flour 3 tablespoons butter -or other fat 2 cups milk 1 teaspoon salt li pound American cheese I quart shredded cabbage 1 cup buttered bread crumbs Cook the spaghetti in boiling salted water for 20 minutes, and drain. Make a sauce of the flour, fat, m:lk and salt. Shave up the cheese, add to the hot sauce, and stir until melt ed. Put the cabbage, spaghetti and YOKOHAMA, Japan. Jan. 36. (AP) The Prince and Princess Mdlvanl, parted January 7 at Reno by Cali fornia process servers, not by the usual Reno method were reunited on the Japanese liner Tntsuta Maru today. Thus a separation beginning wtth the threat of a California subpoena and maintained on a trans-Pacific voyage and which. Japane.e Immigra tion authorities Wednesday threat ened to extend further, ended on the 10th day. Passport officials, who gave Prince Alexis an anxious day on his arrival hero Wednesday, quickly approved the American passport of the former Ber- btvra Hutton and the couple landed and motored to Tokyo. The Impatient prince paced the water-front two hours today, while quarantine doctors rigorously In spected voyagers in the Tatsuta's steerage where Scarlet fever was re ported to have broken out. Finally, Alexis went aboard the steamship company's launch, boarded the liner outside the harbor at the breakwater and hurried to Princess Bnrbara's suite. There the couple a few minutes later received reporters. During the Interview one brash Japanese reporter asked Alexis; "Why do you love her?" "How would you like to be asked such a question?" - the prince retorted. Premium fur Canaillun Lola. TORONTO, Ont (UP) Canadian money ti at a 30 per cent premium in Toledo, Ohio, a Torontonlan who has recently returned from a vlflt to that city reports. He wus asked 20 per cent premium when ho went to exchange the balance of his U. S. money into Canadian currency before returning home. Cruelty Measured by i'omid. BOSTON (UP j Cruelty la meas ured by the pound by Massachusetts courts. When Harold Levitt was ar raigned, charged with cruelty to his hore. Judge Michael H. Sulllv:in wan advised ilut the horse. 10 years old should weigh about 1100 pounds. Levitt's horse weighed only 600, and to the Judge imposed a $35 fine. For the second successive year, Charles Davis, University of Oklahoma tennis star, has been ranked No. 1 In Oklahoma. sauce In a buttered baking dish in layers and cover the top with h buttered bread crumbs. Bake 30 to 30 minutes In a moderate oven. Its way quality made it famous ! Sunsnino Krispy Crackers arc busy all through the dayl They're served with soups and salads at lunch. ..to children after school ... as1 dainty tea-time sandwiches ... all through dinner ... as a bcd-tiuic snack. No wonder Krispy Crackers are on millions of pantry shelves all over the country! Su?islii?ie KR I S PK ' Crackers LOOSE-WILES BISCUIT CO., FORTLAND Teachers' Gifts Banned. NEWTON, Mass . ( UP ) No more apples or flowers in fact, no gifts of any kind for the schoolteachers oi this city because a new ruling was passed, which read, "No teacher shall receive presents from pupils." This Is the latest of many changes In New ton's school system' in the past yenr. BUCHARESTTjarT. 35. (AP) King Boris of Bulgaria, arriving in Ruma nia for a visit with King Carol. left his train at Komana today to chat with peasants. His action occasioned much surprise and some diplomatic disapproval. Phone 642. We will haul away youi refuse. City Sanitary Service. Cheese Important Item In Diet and to Dairyman By Bureau of Hume Kcoiuimlcs, U. S. Department or Agriculture. To use plenty of cheese is one way to use more milk. It is true that cheese does not contain all the food values of milk, but It does contain most of them. And cheese will keep where milk will not. It can be iwed In ways that milk cannot. - These are points to keep in mind, says the Bureau of Home Economics of the U. S. Department of Agricul ture, especially if your food budget & a small one. These are some of the xcasona why the government Is. buy ing great quantities of cheese to dis tribute free to needy families. Gov ernment agents are now beginning to make these purchases with mon?y allotted from relief appropriation, and 1 the cheese they buy will be distrib uted by the Federal Emergency Relief administration to state emergency re lief administrations who will use it in their respective Jurisdictions. This will be whole-milk cheese, known commonly as Just plain Amer ican cheese, though it is much like the English cheddar, and that name is used In '.the official definition un def which the pure food law Is ap plied. One stage of this cheesema: Injr process Is called "cheddarlna." after the English village of Cheddar, where this kind of cheese has been made for more than a hundred years. Other kinds of cheese are made In this country, but not' In such quan tity as the American cheddar cheese. All this cheese distributed wilt be the processed kind and will be put up In half-pound packages. Cheese, the bureau of liome eco nomics reminds up. la not Just some thing to season or flavor something elsea condiment or accessory. Whole milk cheese is a substantial food in itself, good in a main dish on a meat less day, for example, because It con tains many of the same food values as meat,,jind other values besides. It Is rich in protein, fat, calcium and phosphorus, and In vitamin A in other words, it contains the' chief food values of whole milk. There are, however, certain thiiu;s to remember about cheese, if you would enjoy It most. It is a very concentrated food, and too much or It should not be eaten at one time. It should be eaten at a meal with fruit or a vegetable or both. Wholc mllk cheese is very rich in fat; there fore, It ehould be eaten with very little if any other fat. Because cheese contains so much protein. It should be cooked at very low temperature. In fact, most cheese dishes should be cooked over water, or In a very slow oven. The fqod value of cheese, as well as Its flavor, makes' It a valuable ad dition to many an oven dish, to a cream sauce, and to various soups. An onion soup, for Instance, made wltn meat stock, and served with toasted bread on top and grated hard .cheese over the toast, makes a delicious and likewise a very nutritious lunch, in deed a very substantial part of any meal. Macaroni, or rice, or noodles, scal loped with tomatoes and cheese, make a full meal In one dish. The Italian "polenta.' mado of corn meal mush and often served with tomatoes and cheese, is much like this In food value. A casserole of mixed vege tables, enriched by grated cheese over the top. can be another onc-dlsh meal. Corn rabbit, tomato rabbit, golden buck, cheese fondue, English monkey, creamed cheese on toast, are varia tions of the familiar Welsh rabbit, for which there are probab'.y as many recipes as there are cooks who make It. Some Welsh rabbit recipes call for eggs.( but this Is an extravagance In food ' value as well as in money cost, because cheese duplicates the most Important of the eg nutrients The eggs, however, do give a flavor and texture that many people prefer. Tomato rabbit or "rlngtum diddy,' is. practically a whole-meal dish because of the cheese, tomato and toast com bination. Cheese toast and cheese H ow to make good(cmfee every time Only 3 things arc necessary a drip coffee maker in which boiling water drips through a specially prepared coffee and a filter paper. That's all! And it never fails! Delicious every time! Always crystal clear! In a Drip Maker, tlic water drips through the coffee but one time, not many times as in a Percolator. At that one time, all the rich fragrant flavor is extracted from a coffee specially prepared for the process. Coffee prepared for the slow percolator process will not do. (Schilling DRIP Coffee is specially blended, roasted and ground W Q u Q Willi llUt I p.ljltl 3 ( M Ik. I USUI J. 1 1 lllltl JI.IJJk-1 I 1.3 13 UtiW.T .lib wilt... lu .v. ....wu.i ..u... - I . V I ing but the delicious amber drops. Real drip coffee cannot be made otherwise. N Try it!' l ou 11 join the millions who have turned to drip coffee. 2 Special . on. . . ... . . 11 s n r ir .Special model IJnp Loflce Maker and 1 pound 07" Xrhillino Drill CnffeelSl. 20 alVOIir Kroner'. 'Z --J0 r'- r m ,... .,.i A;. .n 11 in arioJ rlJJ " . - . ' "l v ' ...."- 1--- eno" TLJ, to n bchilline & Company, san rrancuco. Jo -f-r,i- m. . 1- -.1 ;t .... C.J 1 trJ iidvj vii k in euner case u nm Hiiinca. on.-- ffipr imi a t'3 n , n ,f, n :i m Don't Pay More Trade at Safeway . COFFEE Airway A splendid roffee at a low 3Lb8. WV prlrc. J"5 Specials For c i 1 kit 1 oaturaay ana monaay Nob Hill nitmlrd to perlri'tlnn. fcftQ Lb Select your Fresh Fruits and Vege tables from our large variety. The best the market affords. Bananas finldrn HI pc Fruit" 4 lbs. 19 Celery Crlp, lender Each Broccoli Roncliurg-itronn, nnow nhltft head Each Spinach Freth, tender 3 lbs. Grapefruit .r Irons Two-portion Alze 3 for 10 10 FLOUR Siifewny, all-pur- L 'fl mf p". S I 73 O Jv "3 for evorv custom NJkJ - Watcu Con In X'Jy 49 lb HONEY flteMRrt'. Unlit and clear. 5 lb. Pail PRUNES Italian, eat them lor break Tast. 3 lbs. JAM Gold Peal, for toast nr muffins. 38 z. jar CATSUP llonfy Hurkle. rich. Ililrk and dcllcht tul. 2-8-oz. bottles TISSUE 7.V.T.. rt while lollrl' Mime. 70 Kheetll. Roll 43 14- 29 15. 4 Quality Meats Fresh Ground HAMBURGER Lb, 7V2C Vegetable SHORTENING 4 Lb. 39c Mild Cure, Sliced BACON Lb. 20C SLICED HAH each 5c Cottage Cheese Lb, 10c PORK STEAK Lb. 15c WHITE KING Granulated soap. It takes so little. -Large Pkg. SHORTENING White Itlhbon. rreh, wei 8-lb. P Peanut Butter lKI. Klnif. The p'rfert nnd lrh fllllnr 2-lb. Jar Tomato Juice l.lhh'l. A hrr Kllh rip CANDY 27 Favorite. A light in evory match. G-box Carton l.lhh'i. A hreahln.! herereite with rip nnd et. No. 2 Can Old fa'lil'in liBnl mil. Lb. 69c 25c 10c 10c PEAS Pel Monte, tn.te (la Tored. No. z run PICKLES Het FHid. Ilred & nutter.Jr BEANS Vin fimp'i ntlh pork. No. I can SYRUP I,oh Cabin, rim. ran C0C0ANUT Rnker'i flniithern lljr. 'i Ih. . MATCHES TOMATOES naj-ley'i ettra slamlnrd pnek. No. 1 Can Pancake Flour Hiifrnn.v (made with butler milk) 9 810 lb. Bag Salad Fruits 15c 15c 6c 21c 11c 10c New hall, ruf ready to frri. 2 No. 1 Cans MIXERS I'nr nmkhig titr own iminn nnle nr nlilpptni cream. V CLEAN-UP Each 11c 39c 25c 19c NUCOA For cook Inf. lb. WE DELIVER QUANTITY ORDERS - MAIN AND HOLLY