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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 8, 1955)
Argentine Labor Group Threatens Widespread Strike Buenos Aires U.PJ Argen tina's biggest labor organization threatened widespread strike ac tion today in a stiff warning against further-revolution. The powerful General Con federation of Labor, which claims more than 6,000,000 members in a country of 19,000, 000 million population, said a refusal to work would be its best weapon against a repetition of the June 16 revolt "when the attack was made by criminals against humanity." Support for Pcron The warning was issued in a formal statement and was inter preted as the union's declaration of support for President Juan D. Peron. The statement contradicted claims by ' Argentine' exiles in Montevideo, Uruguay, across the Plate river. On Tuesday, the military and civilian exiles, in rejecting Peron's bid for coex istence with his political ene mies, said the president had been "deprived of his principal aggressive weapon, the General Confederation of Labor." The GCL statement today said "In a case like that of June 16. when the attack was made by criminals against humanity, each one of us must take up the - weapons in our domain. On Weapon "We hope that men shall not blind themselves again, and if it should happen, we the workers have'one weapon to oppose them refuse to work. That will be our action, defense, law and constitution. Hornbrook Hornbrook The Knitting club met July S at the home of Mrs. L. . Jeter with the following members present, Mesdames Harry Chapman, Marshall Horn, . C. Smith, L. C. Walsh, L. E. Breceda and the hostess. Week end visitors at the L. C. Walsh home were Mr. and Mrs.' William Nothelfer and daughter Donna, Salem, Ore. Mrs. Nothel fer is a sister of Mrs. Walsh. Miss Sheron Walsh - accompanied them to Riddle, Ore., where she will visit friends for a week. Miss Shirley Moffett is visit ing in Dunsmuir this week with an uncle, Floyd Spearin. Ray Moffett suffered a broken rib playing baseball in the Yreka-Dunsmuir game July 3. The Misses Arlene and Bar bara Burns returned this week from Compton, Calif., where they were visiting their sister and family, Mr. and Mrs. Gene Adams. The Adams, former resi dents here, recently moved to Compton where they will make their home. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Hodge and son of Dixon, Calif., are vis iting their parents here, Mr. and Mrs. James Hodge. The Rev. C. C. Addington and wife, Alpaugh, Calif ., arrived July 3 and will conduct regular services at the Methodist Com munity church. Mrs. Ben Bennett drove to Springfield, Ore., to return her husband who has been' having medical care there. Frank Fick returned " this week from Camp Roberts, Calif., where he has been in summer training with the National Guard.. ' ' Mr. and Mrs. Bert Orbel have closed the grocery store at Hen ley Way and have moved to'Fall River, Calif., where they will make their home. - Mr. and Mrs. Carl Williams, Dorris, Calif., are new residents here, living on Henley Way and employed at the Walsh mill. Guests at the Carroll Funk home are their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Carl King, Alameda, Calif. Mr. and , Mrs. Herb Dungey and daughter Mary Pat, Med- ford, were dinner guests July 4 at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Chapman. Guests at the home of Mrs. Marshall Horn this week are her sisters, Mrs. James Cobair, San Francisco, and Mrs. Allen New ton, Yreka. Mrs. Lew Olive, Bishop, Calif., is visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Jacobs here and with friends in Yreka. Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Fowler and family, Sacramento, Calif., were Saturday night guests at the Mary Kurt home here. Week end guests at the Law rence Breceda home were Mrs. James Herr and daughter, Judy and sen Jack, San Francisco, Mr. and Mrs. Miles Conley and daughter Barbara and son Bill, Berkeley; Maron Pisani, San Francisco, and Mr. and Mrs. Gene Breceda, Ashland, Ore. PH. 2-9070 IF NO ANSWER PH. 2-9661 Feeding the Family By ZOLA Feed Peach Dessert Bread I This dessert which can be served hot or cold uses one cup of those luscious peaches that are luxuries right now but in-1 creasing in supply right along. Recipe goes together quickly, make six to eight servings to add to your dessert laurels. j 1V4 cups sifted cake flour 2 teaspoons baking powder ' teaspoon salt 4 tablespoons sugar 6 tablespoons butter ' 1 egg, unbeaten 1 teaspoon vanilla 13 cup light cream 1 cup sliced peaches Crumb topping recipe Mix and sift flour, baking powder, salt and sugar. Cut in butter with two knives. Add egg and vanilla to cream and beat slightly. Pour into dry ingre dients all at once and stir quick ly. Mix just long enough to mois ten dry ingredients. Pour into buttered loaf pan, 9x5x2 Vi inches. Press sliced peaches lightly into top of dough. Sprinkle w,ith topping recipe be low. Bake in moderate hot oven, 375 degrees, for about 45 min utes or until lightly browned. Slice in pan and serve hot or cold, topped with whipped cream if you like. - Crumb Topping. Mix one fourth cup sugar, one tablespoon flour and one-half teaspoon cin namon. Cut in one tablespoon butter with two knives or. with pastry blender. Frills for Flank Steak Flank steak is an economical, no-bone meat buy; lean and full of flavor. Have meat man score the steak. Try braising it in one of these tasty sauces; cover and cook over low heat until tender. Creole Style. Use diluted to mato soup as cooking liquid; add sliced stuffed olives and chopped onion. ' Fruited. To cooking water, add diced celery, grated lemon rind and chopped onion. Half an hour before steak is done, add one-half cup dried apricots and a little more water. Hearty Steak Use canned con some as the liquid and add to it grated carrots.. OR cook flank steak in sour cream, buttermilk, onion soup or vinegar and water for good eating. Aged Cheddar Goes Into Tillamook Taste Tempter i The success of so many cheese recipes depends on the. use of, Cheddar with a tangy flavor re sulting from careful aging. Here we combine choice dry white wine and the finest of sharp, full - flavored, aged-for-a-year natural whole milk cheddar cheese; both the results of long developed west coast skills. Here is another taste thrill from the Tillamook country from whence comes also much good cheese. 2 cups soft bread crumbs 1 cup milk 1 cup dry white wine . 3 tablespoons butter ' 2 cups shredded natural sharp aged cheddar (Vi pound) Vi teaspoon gait 1 teaspoon dry mustard Cayenne pepper or tabasco 2 eggs, slightly beaten Crisp toast ' Soak bread crumbs in the milk. Melt butter over hot water in double boiler or chafing dish. Add cheese. When cheese is melted, add soaked bread crumbs and wine (milk may be used in place of the wine), seasonings. Carefully stir in the eggs. Allow to cook several minutes, stirring constantly. Serve on risp hot toast on hot plates, along with a tossed green or molded grape fruit salad' and any flavored beverage. , Fish Sticks Boon Fish sticks in (the freezing compartment lightens busy day meal-getting, provides unexpect ed guests with good eating, make fine hearty snacks. Of f erred with frozen french fries and served with catsup, chili sauce or tartar sauce, fish stick become the popular fish 'n chips. Buy them uncooked breaded or as golden-brown fried sticks. Both types are cooked without pre-thawing. Follow directions on package for best results. Plenty of lemon wedges on side. Super Col Slaw Place following ingredients in large bowl in order given: One teaspoon salt, one-fourth tea spoonpepper, one-half teaspoon dry mustard, one teaspoon celery seed, two tablespoons sugar, one fourth cup chopped green pep per, one tablespoon chopped red pepper or pimiento, one-half tea spoon grated onion, three table spoons salad oil, one-third cup vinegar, three cups chopped cab bage. Mix well. Cover and chill thoroughly. Garnish with water cress and sliced stuffed olives if you like. Four servings. ;, 7 & IUDI9 REPAIR W Service All Makes AUTHORIZED RCA VICTOR SERVICE ! VINCENT Editor Fresh Versus Canned And Frosen Foods Situation Watching the fresh fruit dis plays for the "best buys" for preserving, jellying, home can ning and home freezing, your foods editor has come to some conclusions for your considera tion. Prices on fresh berries and "soft" fruits are high, likely to continue sok and here is why: Weather conditions have been unfavorable in many of our fin est growing areas. And there's another factor. No doubt about it, commercial canners, freezers and other "preservers" are tak ing a goodly share of the fresh berries and fruits; contracting for them right on the vine, bush, cane or tree. Naturally, they're doing this for us, the consumers. They're taking all the work out of "these jobs arid storing the products for our use later. They're also preparing these foods for the restaurants (one third of all food is eaten away from home, you know) and they're fixing them up in handy sizes for ice cream manufactur ers, for bakeries and other food processors . . . also for our later use of enjoyment. ; Home Processors. Thing for our consideration right now is whether it is best for us to pay the comparatively high prices for the fresh fruit and berries remaining in the market and "put up" these things as in for mer years ... or to forego these earlier pleasures and satisfac tions .of home processing; just re lax and let the professionals do it for us. Chances are that we'll compromise; watch carefully, find a few good buys, put: up some of our, family's favorites regardless of cost. But consider ably less than in former years. Consider This. If your family likes and eats lots of canned peaches, apricots, plums, cher ries, and other "soft" fruits and you're not putting them up this year, you'll be smart to put in cases (they come 24 cans to the case) now, taking advantage of the very good savings to be made on last year's favorably priced packs. Pears are just starting and we'll tell you about them later on. Nearly all grocers will give you special prices on case lots. This is also true of jams, jellies tend preserves. Watch for best buys on frozen foods right along; stock up according to space available and' family needs. " Quick Look at Market. Best buys are broilers and fryers, hamburger, ham shank or butt halves, pork spareribs, frank furters. Small and medium size eggs. Cottage and cheddar cheese. Melons are big item with cantaloupes and watermelons reasonable. Vegetable bins fea ture abundant corn, cucumbers, long white potatoes, salad greens, celery, green beans, cab bage, cauliflower, onions and spinach.- Watch newspaper ad vertisements and displays. Edward Marrow To Spend Vacation in Washington Spokane (U.R) News Com mentator Edward R. - Murrow stopped off here briefly yester day en route to Westport for a salmon fishing vacation. f The CBS radio and .television network vice-president, a gradu ate of Washington State college, said he planned to visit his mo ther, Mrs. R. C. Murrow at Bell ingham before . he returned to New York City July 14. . Vlalet on BUY THE NEW G E AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC Water neater Wash a Load of Clothes EVERY HOUR -All Day Long ONLY $5.00 A MONTH -NOTHING DOWN HOME APPLIANCE 113 EAST MAIN - Authorized Dealer CERERAL Q ELECTRIC Water Heaters SWEETNESS AND LIGHT Fourth of July in Moscow was marked by unprecedented visit paid U. S. Embassy by Russia's top two men. Premier Nikolai Bulganin, left, and strong man Nikita Khrushchev, right Latter told American officials "real results" can be expected at the forthcoming "Big Four" conference .in Geneva. Britain Offers To Attract Big Business of By ROBERT MUSEL United Press Correspondent London (U.R) Tourism is big busines so you can't blame Brit ain for marshalling all its re sources to attract overseas vis itors. The competition is tough. France claims its belle cuisine is out of this world. Italy boasts its shrines and sunshine are out of this world. So Britain is about to promote an attraction that is really out of this world. I refer to ghosts. When it comes to wraiths .and apparitions of one sort and an other Britain reigns supreme. There is scarcely an old tavern, manor house or castle without a cowled monk, transparent white lady or cavalier with head tucked under arm. Not long ago it occurred to the British Travel and-Holiday Asso ciation that here was a lure for tourists. They could be offered a journey to one of those be witched manses. In the guise of a tourist I called at the association's office in St. 1 You certainly ought to come see why this new kind of hardtop is headed for the best-seller list It's a Buick Riviea, of course. " : Which means the low and rakish look of a Convertible a solid steel roof overhead and no center posts in the side window areas to obstruct your view. But that's only the beginning. Here you get two extra doors. They open to the rear compartment. So no one in the front has to move 'when someone gets into or out of the rear. Here you get massive half -pillars on either side on which the front doors latch and the rear doors hinge. (That's DRIVE FROM FACTORY SAVE UP TO, See Your BUICK Dealer Wide Variety James and talked with a ghost salesman named Ray Hewett. -"Ah yes," he said briskly, "you are interested in haunts. Any preferences?" "No," I said, "just show nie the complete stock." Hewett rifled through some cards. . "Here are a couple you can try on for size," he said. "Both in Midhurst, in Kent. The pub there, 'The Angel,' has what they describe as a 'nice old lady's ghost. At the manor house near by there's a monk lamenting the loss of his lady love, daughter of the lord of the manor. But he generally appears only in No vember." ""Any ghosts going in July?" I inquired. "Here's a real curiosity for you," he said. "The black dog of Hergest. Conan Doyle used the story for The Hound of the Bas kervilles. Of course there's a snag the dog only howls for the death of a member of one of the prominent families there." Friday, July 8, 1935 of Ghosts Tourists I can't wait that long," I said. - "Any ghost in full operation right now?" Shadowy Rider VWell," he said, "there's the Royal Castle Hotel in Dart mouth. They say a shadowy rider clatters into the inn yard in. the dead of night." "Not bad. Any others?" And so he traveled through the list of ghosts who opened doors, ghosts who gazed dolefully at the beholder, ghosts who passed through ancient walls and a beautiful ghost, pinup girl of the haunted world, Rosamond . de Clifford, mistress of Henry II, who wears only a sheer silk gown. " . ; Among others, I took direc tions to the mermaid pool in Staffordshire, haunted by a Brit ish Lorelei. Hewett quoted an old rhyme: ' -V. "She calls on you to greet her "Combing her dripping crown " And if you go to; meet her "She ups and drags you down. why you see no center posts above the" door line.) . Here, too, you get wholly new struc tural principles n body design and strength that give this beauty the' extra safety of rock-firm solidity at the top, sides and bottom. ' " , And here bless those Buick engi neers! you get a lot more room in the '" rear compartment. For the 4-Door Riviera gives you over 9 inches more hiproom and 5 inches more legroom yet with no increase in wheelbase or over-all car length. So we repeat you certainly ought to come in and see this stunning new kind of hardtop. : -",". WHM UTTK AUTOMONW AM WW MMIMt MU Ml " '' iy: ' ' ' " it MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUKaV THSXS BRITISH STUDIES READY London (U.R) Britain has promised will make available its own studies on atomic radiation effects to any international commission under the United Nations. Minister of State Anthony Nutting said Brit ain "welcomes the United States' initiative" in suggesting a U.N. study of nuclear radiation ef fects on human beings. FILE ARTICLES Salem -(U.R) Articles of in corporation have been filed here today for Medford Clinic Prop erties, Inc., of Medford. They are signed by I. M. Eitreim, 188-hp Buick SPECIAL 6-Passenger, It's the last word in beauty, com fort, convenience. It's available in Buick's two lowest-priced Series the Special and the Century. And it's all Buick power, ride, handling and the spectacular performance of Buick's Variable Pitch-; Dynaflow. Prop in today tomorrow at . the -latest and learn what Buick's all time record sales year can mean to you in the way of a whopping-big trade-in deal. r . ' Vrubl Pitch Dynsflow is tb$ only Vynsflow Btuci budds todsy. lt is sumtUii on ROADMASTER, optiod 0t modtst txtfd cost on otbtr S 'frits. .. Shirley G. Christenaen . an Dorothy F. McQuat ay n-:u.M t t- At rm--ll QUALITY BLOCKS Bricks. Flae : Drain Tito Ml W. McAndrews Phon S-41OT 4-Door RiviElA, Model 43 143 SOUTH RIVERSIDE PHONE 2-6243