Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, March 22, 1935, Page 9, Image 9

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    rEDTOHD MAIL TRTBTPCE. "MTFORD, OHEflON. FRIDAY. MARCH 22. 1933.
PAGE NTSTE
mm mm
VI W w III
n.
to mi
Luoraart Dawfcksw Hare Milk Display
llM l KST5S yr'f
(Continued irvm page one)
did good work. The 'young Turks'
in the legislature held down the old
Democrats. The state must get away
from minority group quibbling and
work for the good of all. There are
too many blocs taking pot shots at
every meritorious action, whenever
proposed.
The governor listed Rep. Moore
Hamilton of this county as one of
'the "Young Turks.1 who had. Pr
4 formed nobly In the legislature.
"I vetoed a number of bills that
were paved," said the governor, "and
gave a sound r'nwon in every in
stance for my action." The governor
was assured that his wielding of
the veto ax met with the same wide
approval here as elsewhere.
The chief executive, looking the
picture of health, was In fine humor
and optimifltlc as to the future.
Glad to Get Bark.
"X always like to get back to
Jackson county. It's an up and
coming section that other districts
of the state could copy. I am look
ing forward with pleasure to ap
pearing in this city April 25, at the
annual banquet of the Chamber of
Commerce
The governor Inquired particularly
about Jacksonville, and recalled a
visit he made In the pioneer town
during the campaign.
During the short stay in this city.
Governor Martin held an Informal
reception and was greeted by a num
ber of local citizens. Including P. L-
TouVelle, of Jacksonville (listed by
political forecasters as a selection
for the state highway commission,
when a vacancy occurs). Attorney
A. E. Reames, Ralph Stephenson,
Democratic county chairman, E. M.
' Wilson, Attorney E. E. Kelly, Prank
D" Souza, Rep. Moore Hamilton and
others.
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PET
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PET-
PATRONSh mh.
A speelal Pet Milk display which has heen altrnrtlnc considerable at
tention at, Luman Brothers I. O. A. store Ihls week Is shown shore. This
display was arranged by P. E. Hicks, representative In the MecHord area
for the Pet Milk Corporation.
TO SPEED OF LI
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (TJP) Headaches
re on the Increase, not because of
repeal, but because exigencies of
modern civilization are making them
more prevnlent, according to Dr. J.
M. Robb, professor at Wayne Uni
versity. "Keeping up with the Joneses,
pressure of modern living, dirt in
the air and lack of rest are causing
headaches to increase," he believes.
"Headaches and asthma have a close
relationship and both are affected
by heredity, social and occupational
factors."
'DEIROjlfETTEASI
PER CAPITA TO CHEST
DETROIT (UP) Among 10 large
cities of the country, Detroit gave
the least money per capita to Its
community chest and Cincinnati the
most, according to figures presented
before 400 women in the first meet
ing of the Women's Mobilization for
Human needs.
Detroit gave $1 per capita, while
the nine other cities contributed the
following sums per capita:
Washington, $3.09: Cleveland,
S2.98; Minneapolis. 3.39: Cincinnati
3.48: Philadelphia, 2.07; Los An-
seles. 2.08: St. Louis. 2.14; Pitts
burgh, 81.84. and Kansas City, 2.85.
Borah Will Lunch
With Roosevelt
WASHINGTON. March 22. (P)
Senator Borah. Idaho Republican and
frequent administration critic, was In
vited to luncheon today at the White
House.
President Roosevelt and Borah have
never held a private discussion, al
though the senator has be?n at other
White House conlercnces wun groups
It was Borah who proposed yester
day to restore the anti-trust laws
through nn amendment to the relief
bill. It was voted down. 33 to 43.
Meanest Man Robs
Pup Of Breakfast
PEDONDO BEACH. Cal.. March 22.
(Pi S!d Bosch hos dog Every
morning he put five pennies in Its
mouth and the puppy trots otr to
store, where the proprietor gives it
a nickel's worth of food In exchange ;
for the pennies.
yesterday morning a friendly man j
stopped the dog, patted It on the
head and took the five pennies.
CULINARY
RAFT....
By fotella Dnrgan. Director. Borne
Service, the California Ore
gon Power Company
Variety In Lenten Pishes
One of the Ideas back of the cus
tom of the "Lenten Fast" is a grace
ful transferrins from winter to spring
food combina
tions. It may well
WW
be a challenge
I to get out oi tne
I -'Te.. I r u 1 of neavy
KSft I eating and wel-
II come the fresh
offering of the
new season.
However, it may
be an excuse to
serve the same
thlrion over too
'A often also. Lack
of Imagination
EsteUa Oorgan tn springtime Is I
an Indication of a sad condition of I
mind nrd body but we can all un-
derstand the lethargy cnunea by
"Spring Fever" too so a little list
of possibilities may ae a timely men
tal tonic.
Vegetable
Corn Oilers
2 c canned corn (areiun style)
2 eggs
4 T flour
ya t baking powder
3 T melted butter
2 t salt
Dash of pepper
Beat yolks and whites of eggs sep
arately and combine with other In
gredients. Drop from a spoon into
deep fat or fry to a light brown.
Drain and' nerve hot with syrup. -A
vegetable salil, hot rolls and fruit
would make a fine combination to
serve with tliesj oysters" at. the
main dish.
Scalloped Corn with Celery
3 c canned corn
3 o diced celery
1 egg
1 t salt
Vi t peppei
6 crackers
1 T butter
Crush crackers a little bit and
combine with corn and celery. Beat
egg slightly and add with season
Ings. Place In buttered casserole and
dot with the butter. Bake at 350 de
grees for 30 minutes or with an oven
dinner up to one hour.
Catthoge au G rat In
1 small head of cabbage
3 c medium white sauce
1 c grated cheeso
Cook the cabbage in hot water un
til tender. Drain and place in but
tered baking dish. Pour over It the
white sauce and grated cheese and
bake 20 minutes at 350 degrees.
Sweet Potatoes with Apples
Place alternate layers of sliced
sweet potatoes and sliced apples,
Sprinkle with brown sugar and dot
with butter. Bake with oven dinner
or 45 minutes at 350 degrees.
Hominy and Cheese, naked
X large can of hominy
3 c thin cream sauce
1 e grated cheese
1 e buttered cracker crumbs
Drain the hominy and pour Into,
buttered baking dish. Season to taste
and cover with cracker crumbs,
cheese and grated cheese. Bake 30
minutes at 350 degrees.
Scrambled Potatoes with Eggs
4 cooked potatoes, diced
2 T butter
4-5 eggs
Brown the diced potatoes In but
ter and add the eggs. When Just be
ginning to set the whites, stir so as
to scramble them and season to taste.
Watch carefully and remove from
pan before the eggs are overdone.
Kraut and Dumplings
1 quart of kraut
Dumplings:
1 c flour
1 t baking powder
i; t salt
I egg
A c milk
1 t chopped parsley
61ft flour, salt and baking powder
together. Beat egg and add to milk
and stir into dry ingredients, adding
chopped parsley. Drop by teaspoons
Into hot kraut, cover and let boll
10 minutes. Serve at once.
King Molds
KUc King
3 o cooked noodles
'A o melted butter
Pour drained rice Into a buttered
ring mold and pour the melted but
ter over It. Bake In moderate oven
(350 degrees) for 30 minutes, unmold
and fill with various combinations
of vegetables, fruit, fish or meat.
Noodle King
3 coked noodles
3 eggs
o milk
1 T melted butter
Salt and pepper to taste
Beat eggs slightly and add remain'
ing Ingredients. Pour into buttered
ring mold and bake 45 minutes at
350 degrees.
Cheese Rarebit
'2 lb. cheese
2 eggs
1 c cream
2 T butter I
2 T flour J
Salt, pepper, mustard to taste
Cut cheese Into small pieces and
add to slightly beaten eggs then add
remaining Ingredients and mil thor- 1
oughly. Use a good sized saucepan or
frying pan and set on "low" heat
and cook entirely on that heat, stir
ring to keep blended.
Iih
Broiled Oysters
Use large oysters.
Wipe dry.
Dip in cooking oil or melted butter.
Place on greased rack and broil
until the edges curl slightly.
Turn once if desired.
Serve on buttered crackers which
have been toasted to a light brown
in the lower part of the oven while
the oysters are broiling.
Clam Fritters
2 c minced clams
t, o flour
i c cracker crumbs
1 egg
Salt and pepper to taste
Mix well and drop by teaspoons
into fat and cook until & golden
brown.
Salmon Box
Line a loaf pan with cooked rice
and fill the center with seasoned
cooked salmon. Cover with rice and
bake hour at 350 degrees.
Deviled Crab
1 crab
2 c medium cream sauce
2 eggs
2 T parsley
Buttered crumbs and seasonings
Beat eggs lightly and add with the
flaked crab meat and chopped pars
ley to the white sauce. Place in
greased shells (or dlshi and sprinkle
with buttered crumbs and seasonings
to taste. Bake at 400 degrees for 10
minutes or longer If in dish.
4
SENATE APPROVAL
FREELY PREDICTED
EOR VETPAYMENT
(Continued from page on.)
PolUe Want Ihief Hunter.
WAKEFIELD, Mass. (UP) Re
versing the usual order of tilings. : public to help them recover their
Wakefield police appealed to the 1 .iclen automobile.
Communications
lestftlauon today lurther justiflee the
flpht we have made." j
Frank N. Belgrano, Jr., American
Legion commander, told reporters:
"The American Legion thought the
Vinson bill would assure immediate,
full cash payment of the soldiers'
bonus. The house apparently thought
otherwise.
Legion Free to Act
"We have made no decision on
what we will do In the senate except
to work for Immediate, full cash pay-
ment of the bonus." I
It was pointed out that Bel grs no's !
position left him free to work, in
the senate, for the Vinson, Patmon.
or any other full, cash payment bill
which he thought would pass.
Chairman Harrison of the senate
finance committee predicted the
Patman bill could not pass the sen
ate over a veto.
While he was hopeful a comprom
ise could be worked out, he could not
say at this time If that were pos
sible. He planned "reasonable hearings"
on the subject and to give the senate
a chance at the earliest opportunity
to vote on the question.
He believed the senate would not
tack the patman bill to the relief
measure, as Senator Thomas (D.,
Okla.), announced earlier In the day
he would try to do.
"Farmer Bill
Answers
To the Editor:
Answering Farmer Bill.
Say, Bill, you will have to tell what
kind of "hop" you smoked In order
to have that dream of yours; I
couldn't answer you properly with
out the same kind of smoke.
I'll tell you how to get some more
money to pay tnat star-gazer oi
yours Just kill the rest of your hogs
and Santa Claus will send you
check for them.
When you have your next dream
about our respective platforms don't
forget that Huey and I are not go-
Ins to have anyone paying taxes
(only the 2 per cent Townsend trans
action tax). We are going to let the
tax-eaters starve for a while like we
have starved for the last 4 years; you
know who the tax-eaters are, those
poor fellows that had to take a 10
per cent cut tn salaries and those
who couldn't take a cut bemuse their
salaries were fixed by law.
We also guarantee not to make a
worse mess of things than what we
have new.
GEO. IVERSON, "Vice Pres."
p. s. Nobody has told me what
t nm vice nresldent of but It feels
mnri tYi h v. p. of Romethlnc. O. 1. 1 ber of the
eldest S4.
Belgium Will Stay
On Gold Standard
LONDON. March 33. (P The Ex
change Telegraph Ajzency was Inform
ed by the National Bank at Belgium,
in a telephone conversation today, that
a report In the city of London thit
Belgium would either go off the gold
standard or devaluate the belga. was
false.
"The report is untrue," the bank
was quoted as saying. "Belgium Is
on the gold standard and remains on
the gold standard."
1
For Boss that Wear buy
NOLDE & HOR8T
Ethelwyn B Hoffmann
TAP FOR MAPLE SAP
PERRY, O. (UP) Fancy. If you
will, Elmer Sweetdew's perplexity
when a thin trickle of whisky ran
from a spout inserted in a maple
tree to draw sap on his farm near
Centerville.
Scarcely trusting his senses, he
walked around the tree, on the othor
side, he (ound his drill had bored
through a cork in a Jug cached tn
a deep cavity of the trunk.
Then he remembered a hired man
he had discharged several years ago
who habitually took along a Jug of
liquor to lighten his labors.
Claim Longevity Record.
CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. (UP)
Five new claimants to the world's
longevity record have been found
here. They are the son and four
daughters of the late John Inman of
Harrington, whose combined ages
total 454 years. Tho youngest mem-
family Is 87 and the
The Choice of Millions
KC BAKING POWDER
Doable Tested Doable Action
Manufactured by baking powder Specialist
who make nothing but baking powder
under supervision o expert chemists.
Same Price Today as 44 Years Ago
25 ounce tor 25
You can also buy
Ar 1 1 10 ounc can tor (M
IUll if crane can top IS
Highest Quality Always Dependable
Ml llf. L4M J I J.ll I! .H I :Oi tUJ liUlil
TOWER
If Jergens
A 37c J
f $1.00
Calonite l
if Dr. Wests
( Paste
JL 17 )
yiooN
Yeast
M Tablets II
yp39cy
$1.50
116
ROCK BOTTOM PRICES!
at
JARMIN'S
DRUG STORE
THE STORE FOR THRIFTY BUYERS
KOTEX
17c
EX-LAX
17c
COTTON lb. 29c
ADLERIKA 69c
Save on
Remedies
Insulin 10ocU40 $1.77
Calbisma Powder 69c
Jad Stilts Cond. . 49c
Squibbs Oil Agar 59c
Mineral Oil, pints 29o
Petrolagar 84o
S. S. S 99c
Save on
Medicines
Vicks Rub 24o
Balm Bengue 34c
Zinc Oxide Oint 9c
Donns Pills 50c
Cystex 57o
Alcohol Rub, pints 13c
Haliver Malt 70c
Citrates Carbon
ates, 8 oz 37o
Bromo
Seltzer
fioo t7.e
49c
Pond's
Creams
3.1c olie
25c
Aspirin
Tablets
IDA'S
lie
Kleenex
Tissues
lc
TOBACCOS
Prince Albert, Velvet,
Granger, 16 oz 69c
15c tins 9c
10c tins 7o
5c Tobaccos, 3 for 10c
Copenhagen 8o
Beechnut 8o
Days Work, Horse
Shoe, Star, Climax 8c
6c cuts 4o
15c Cigarettes,
2 for 25o
Have your next
PRESCRIPTIONS
filled at J arm ins.
Prompt and exacting
service.
Save on
Cosmetics
50o Woodburys
Cosmetics 35c
50c Hinds H & A 39c
Italian Balm 27o
Milkweek Cream 39c
Junis Tube 39o
Coty Powders 69c
Cutex 31c
Ayers Week-end
Sets 89c
$1.50
Minamin
60c
Pepsodent j
Paste
Woodburys
Facial
Soap
$1.29 H 3ic li3for25c
CHRISTIAN CHURCH PLANS
SACRED CONCERT SUNDAY
A sacred concert w'.l! be ?!ren by j
t!i(s choir of the First Christian j
church, Sunday evening at 7:30. Spe
cial number will be alven by Mia I
Eleanor Curry. M. E. O'.'m, a male
quartet and n ladles' quartet. Eftle
Herrjert Yeoman I the director ajid (
Mab'.e Sims the plarifit. j
.
- ;ir-nld (nn.irv.
SACRAMENTO. Cal.- ( UP 1 When
Mrs. P. H. KothrrlnKham's son MM
to ar in 1017 he gave her ca
nary. It Uvea still, but It's 18 years
of ltvine apparently has paraly7ed
Its vocal powers. An occa.-lonal peep
Is the only evidence that It once
was a f:ne German roller.
I MtMIS Hill I. -Tl'lll'
206 E. Mai.
MARKET
Free Delivery
Phone 46
The new management of the Economy invites you to make J
this your headquarters for all meat shopping. We are proud
of our fine selection of meats and courteous, reliable service.
Fryers
Roasting Chix
and Rabbits
Fresh Fish
Crabs and
Oysters
Dry Picked
Young Hens
Special Price
Ash About Them!
Steer Beef
Roasts, lb.
15c
Quality Veal
Roast, lb.
14V2C
Saturday Shopping Sfmv-doimi on "Coffee-Floating"
EjVERY Saturday afternoon
John went along with Mary Marvin
to lend a hand with the weekly,
shopping. Or rather, while Mary
ordered from her list, John amused .
himself with the grocer's cat.
But there came a Saturday when
the cat rubbed its head against
John's leg and got no attention.
John was listening to Mary ... "a
pound of butter, a dozen
eggs, and I want a new
kind of coffee."
"Hold on, there," John
said. "Mary, you pick a
new coffee every week,
and you're the world's
cm,
BrTni -f fro
Car rubbed herself agalnti John's fegs
Let's Jlck fo Hi'li Sroi. Coffee"
worst picker. Let's stop
this floating and stick
to Hills Bros. Coffee. I
don't mind changing
some things. But I'm
a one-coffee man at
heart. Hills Bros, might cost a penny or so
more, but I'll bet a pound makes more
and better cups." Mary knew that look in
John's eye. "I'll have a pound of Hills
Bros, this week," she said. "Every week,
she means," John winked at the grocer
07W 1911 Htlll Urol.