Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, May 03, 1935, Page 7, Image 7

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    MEDFOTvD MATL TTJIBUXE. MEDFOKl. OHEUO. riUDAT. MAT IMfl.
TAGE SEVEN
lit
' Se a a' 3
LUMAN
BROTHERS
TORIGONp
Qujllly
Main and Bartlett
Buy Oregon Build Oregon
There is no finer way to contribute
to the development of this state than
to support Oregon industries . . . For
your own good and the welfare of
this state, get the "Buy Oregon"
habit!
Specials
for
Saturday
LU MAN'S MEAT SPECIALS
Choice Rhode Island Red Hens lb. 20c
I
FOR DRUG'S BILL
Failure and Delay Have
Dogged Efforts From
Start Measure Rewritten
Dozen Times, Is Estimate
would mean the loss of these legal
Interpretations and going over the
same ground again.
Regardless of that argument, how
ever, the fact remains that If the sen
ate passes the Copeland bill and the
house the Mead proposal, the meas
ure ultimately to prevail will be
written when the two bills go to con
ference. "Doc" Copeland's "stepchild" may
emerge from what sometimes Is de
scribed as the "third house" In such
form that he will not only disclaim
paternity Nut any relation at all.
Rhode Island Red Fryers . lb. 28c
Choice Beef Pot Roast . lb. 15c
.Good Eastern Bacon . . lb. 27c
Country Style Sausage . lb. 15c
Local Vegetables of All Kinds
Asparagus, 3 lbs 25c
Klamath Falls Spuds, No. 2,
50 lbs 79c
FLOUR
Special?
Klamath Falls Bouquet
49 lbs SI. 59
Kitchen Queen Flour
49 lbs . S1.79
MILK, Peter Pan 3 for 19c U
COFFEE SPECIALS P
Vermont
Maid
Syrup
Delicious with
waffles and
pancakes. A fla
vor that pleases
everyone.
16 oz. bottle
20c
In
fin
in1
By Herbert Phimmer
WASHINGTON For something
like two years the senate's only M D.
the gray-haired, deliberate Royal
S. Copeland of New York has la
bored to obtain passage of a new
food and drugs bill In congress.
Failure and disappointing delays
have dogged his efforts from the
start.
It Is estimated the measure has
been rewritten as many as a dozen
times since the original draft, cred
ited with being the brain child of
"Bralntruster' Rex Tug well, flst was
submitted to congress In the spring
of 1933.
During those two years In the
neighborhood of 200 wltnessea have
paraded before the doctor and his
committee, tt has been an almost j
continuous Job as far as he Is con- i
cerned. ' I
Copeland admitted when he sue-1
ceeded In getting the bill before the j
senate after the work-relief bill hod
been disposed of finally that despite
the fact It bore his name he was
nothing more than its "stepfather.''
Retreat Forced
"I have understood." he said rath
er Ironically, "that many a step
father loves his stepchild" and pro
ceeded to lavish as much care and
affection on the bill as he could
command. t
After a week of hammering away
Copeland was forced to make a stra
tegic retreat, tender a threat to send
the bill back to committee for an
other revision, thus losing all that
he had gained, the doctor agreed to
shelve his "stepchild" on the senate
calendar without prejudice until sen
ators are In a better mood.
Many observers believe, howevoi.
the Copeland "stepchild" Is far from
being "out of the woods" yet.
Another Hill In House
A companion bill In the hou&e.
sponsored by Representative Mead of
New York, proposes not a new food
and drugs act as does the Copeland
measure, but drastic amendment of
the present law (the 30-year-old Dr.
Wiley act).
During debate on the Copeland bill
In the senate the - question aroe
time and again whether It would not
be better for the senate to proceed
along the lines of the Mead bill. The
argument was advanced that under
the Wiley bill a vast amount of liti
gation had been threshed out help
ful both to the government and to
all others concerned. Substitution of
an entirely new bill. It was argued
SHREDDED
WHEAT
RECIPES
RAZING ANCIENT
PARRISBAFFLED
French Would Remove Huge
and Ugly Structure Before
Exposition in ,1937
Cannon Suggested.
Hills Bros
21b.
57c
Hills Bros
1 lb.
29c
COFFEE
W WHEAT
WHEAT
KRISPIES
2 Pkgs.
25(
TTTl
till'
lbs. 49c
3
hi
DEL MONTE
Pineapple Juice
Cans 1 can IwC
LIBBY'S
Homogenized
Baby Food
3 cans
29c
Manufactured by baking
powder Specialists who
make nothing but bak
ing powder under
supervision of expert
chemists.
ALWAYS
Sam price today
as 44 years ago
X5 fer 250
FULL PACK
NO SLACK FILLING
tnlniie Shredded Wheat IMshea
Save Time
Extra guest need never disturb
you if you are willing to go ad
venturing along your cupboard
shelves. Take that package of Shred
ded Wheat for Instance ... at once
the most unique and complete and
healthful of foods. Everybody likes
It for breakfast smothered In straw
berries or other seasonable fruits, but
did you ever depend on Shredded
Wheat for a quick frlcaasee. or an
entree, or a dessert. You'll be amaz
ed at the versatility of Just this one
cereal when you try these suggestions:
Chicken Fricassee With Shredded
Wheat Biscuit
Clean, singe, and cut the chicken
into pieces for serving. Cover with
boiling water, add 1 teaspoon salt
and U teaspoon white pepper. Cook
slowly till tender, reducing the water
to 1 pint. Tnke the chicken Trom
the water, remove the large bonea,
put the chicken where tt will keep
warm. Add to the pint of stock Vt
cup cream. Blend together tn sauce
pan 3 tablespoons butter and 5 tab
lespoons flour, add the hot stock
and cream stirring till thick and
smooth. Season to taste with celery
salt and white pepper. Place the
chlckan in the sauce and keep hot
while you prepare 5 Shredded Wheat
biscuits. With the bowl of a tea
spoon crush a cavity in the top of
the biscuit, removing the Inside
shreds to form a pattie shell. Heat
thoroughly tn the oven. Place heated
biscuit on warm platter, ana ar
range chicken neatly on the biscuit,
Turn the sauce over all and serve
at once.
Crenmed Peas In Shredded Wheat
Biscuit Basket
1 quart cooked green peas or
1 can peas
2 cups milk
2 tablespoons flour
2 tablespoons butter 1
14 teaspoon salt
1, teaspoon paprlca
1 teaspoon scraped onion
6 Shredded Wheat biscuits
1 tablespoon butter
1 teaspoon salt
If ereen peas are used, cook in
boilim? unsalted water till tender.
Just before they are done, add 1 tea
spoon salt. Then drain and add 1
level tablespoon butter. Make a white
sauce of the milk, butter, flour, salt,
paprlca and onion Juice, cook two
minutes and add the pea. Prepare
the biscuit baskets by crushing the
top of the biscuit with the bowl of
a teaspoon. Heat thoroughly In the
oven, fill with the creamed peas and
serve hot, sending the remaining
aauce to the table In ft pitcher to
be added there.
Children's Favorite Cookies
la cup fat
I cup brown sugar
1 egg
2 teaspoon soda
114 cups flour
3 Shredded Wheat biscuits
3 cup raisins
'A cup sour or buttermilk
Sift flour and soda together. Koll
the Shredded Wheat biscuits. Cream
the fat, add augar gradually, then
well-beaten egg, rolled Shredded
Wheat and the raisins cut In small
pieces. Add sifted dry Ingredient and
milk alternately. Drop by teaspoon
fuls on greased pans and bake from
IS to 20 minutes In a moderate
PARIS (UP I The esthetic
been advocating doing something
about the Trocadero preferably
something Involving dynamite be
fore Paris puts on It 1937 exposi
tion, but the latest Inside Informa
tion runs along the lines of "try
and do It."
There is no question of taking
brick from brick, and lath from
plaster. The Ttocadero. big and ugly
as It is, la of enduring stone, large
hard chunks of It. When, after the
war. engineers set to work to dig a
niche In the wall of the main hall
for a moving picture machine they
nearly gave np In despair.
Need Field Artillery.
They don't want to tackle the
Job of taking It all down unless the
government gives them field artil
lery to do It with. Even with that.
they doubt if slightly over a year
Is time enovigh.
When the Ttocadero was built in
1876 it was considered to be some
thing special tn the way of archi
tecture. It still is, but of a kind
that led the government to offer
prises for projects for masking the
Trocadero to convert it from a stylish
stout to a sylphlike modern young
lady. All the projects were awful, so
attention turned on preparing It
for the 1037 exposition by carting
It away.
Lost .Museums.
Now that doesn't aeem to be very
easy. Besides where then Is the city
going to put the Indochlnese Mil
scum, the Museum of Comparative
Sculpture, the Ethnographic Museum
and the Cinema Repository?
There are rumored to be other
museums lost In some of the further
stretches of the uncharted cellars of
the Ttocadero, but the custodian
couldn't swear to it. He said alt he
knew about the underlying cata
comb 1 that when the ethnogrnph
era start preserving specimens of the
less advanced races In assorted
chemicals, the subterranean reaches
are no place for man with whole
lungs or even with fragmentary
ones.
Kid din Matinee
May 11 Sponsored
By IGA Merchants
Besides donating free movie tickets
to nee the thrilling fhow "Cimarron"'
Saturday morning. May 11. at the
Rlalto theatre at 10 o'clock, the 1. O.
A. stores of the city and vicinity are
staging a free carnival including bal
loons and surprise gifts for boys and
girls under 16 years of age.
A label from any I. O. A. canned
goods or a coupon clipped from the
I. O. A. advertisement in today's Mall
Tribune will be exchanged at any of
the locnl members of this grocery
organization for a free ticket to this
exciting celebration, according to
Sabln Glbbs. manager of Mason. Ehr
man company.
Richard Dlx. the handsome gentle
man who furnishes plenty of action
have in all of his pictures. Is the star of
the famous movie "Cimarron."
FATHER AND SON
4
Father, Son Collect Tensions
SHELBURNE, Ont. (UP) Eamuel
Moore, 90. and his son, Norman. 72,
are believed to be the only father
and son In Canada drawing old age
pensions. Samuel Moore, who will
celebrate his 100th birthday Sept. 6.
Is In good health.
CAMP APPI.EOATE, CCC iSpt.)
"Like father, like son." never mean',
more than It does In the case of A.
M. Coghlan and his son, A. P. Cogh
lan. the two first cooks In AppleRau
camp. A. M. Coghlan has been rooking
more years In restaurants, hotels, on
boats and In camps than most CCC
men have lived . He has the touch
that gives that extra good flavor to
all foods served from his kttchen.
Y3-.ii.1c Andy, who like hts fathei
la a fine baker as well as a cook, has
followed In his father's footsteps and
has himself cooked In rentaurnnts.
clubs and camps. Together they make
a culinary team hard to beat.
MILK
30c per gal.
"Grade A" Milk
and Cream
from
Tested Cows
Kershaw Milk Depot
106 N. Ivy St.
0
NEW YORK'S
NEWEST!... LONDON'S LATEST!
Sherry at Cocktail Time
bpecijy
Guasti
From Mayfair, London, to Park Avenue,
New York, sherry is the vogue at cocktail
time . . . and in New York, Guasti is the
vogue in sherries. . .it is more than holding
its own with the finest in the world ... for
there is a smoothness and mellowness about
it that is quite the equal of the best imported
...it has what connoisseurs call "character"
. . and it comes by it honorably, for Guasti
is the oldest wine-making organization in
America-and "knows its sherry!"
Order a bottle today ... the low price will
amaze you!
WINES
BY fc
aBVaHBMBBBBBaaBHBBaBHBBaHBaBBBa t
FRUIT INDUSTRIES, Limited
Lot Angelas
Chicago
San Frond KO
New York
4
SWEET WINES
Port, Sitrry, Ttiay,
Anitlica, Mutcattl,
DRY RED WINES
Clent, Burgundy,
TJnjhndel.
DRY WHITI
WINES
Sauttrnt, Rinlinf,
Chahlii.
Distributed by Blumauer Frank Drug Co. v McKaiton Pacific Drug Co. Wadhamt 4 Co.
u
s
m
oven.
Horns portrait of Tamil; groupi
and children at Special PrlOM
-Wangle- studio Phone 1304
Be correctly ooraeted IB
an Artlrt Model by
Ethelwyn B Hoffmann.
'The Home of Good Meats, Swift'i Gov't Inspected Meats"
Shop and Save at Hunan's is becoming a byword
with hundreds of Rogtie Valley families. Our Bakery
department is no exception to this rule . . . Finest
quality, large variety at economical prices . . . that's
the reason for the popularity of our Bakery Depart
ment. Check over these spe-ial items.
Large Size New Type Cookies, Several
Varieties to Choose from - Doz.
L.mon Chiffon Cakes,
a roil home type cake
14c
Each 23C
i
Quality
Every time you buy Oregon Products you
help the general prosperity of the state.
And when you buy Oregon Meats yon
get the very highest grad . . .
We Feature Nothing But
OREGON MEAT
CHOICE OREGON BEEF
CHOICE OREGON PORK
CHOICE OREGON VEAL
CHOICE OREGON LAMB '
Al Stewart's Capon Fryers
Fine Valley.Hens and Rabbit
Fresh Fish of all kinds
QuttHy j
The Greeks iuul a toxui for "Coffee-Floaters"
MRS. TOMPKINS looked up from
the' magazine she was reading
"These Nomads must have led a
discouraging 'life never settled
and constantly wandering around."
Mr. Tompkins laid down his paper.
"Well," he said, "so the Greeks had
a word for it, too 1 "
"Why, what do you
mean? " queried Mrs.
Tompkins.
" Coffee - Nomads in
Greek Coffee-Floaters
in American," retorted
Mr. Tompkins, "and
You con B' mora fin eupi of coffee
from a pound
Thu Nomadi fed a diicouroging lft
that's what we are. Con
tinually floating around
from one brand to
another trying to find
a coffee that tastes right.
I think it's high tim
settled down to
we
Hills Bros. Coffee. It
has flavor and strength that never varies.
And I know that you can get more
fine cups of coffee from a pound of
Hills Bros. Coffee than you can from
any other brand."
Ci l H'lli
f