Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 19, 1955)
vo o o G o o G G O G G O o O 0 o O O o G 0 G Q O Q & G ? O Q G O 5 O o o o o o G ft G O 0 Q 5 G O & o o G) G o O e (31 G.5 Feeding the Family By ZOLA VINCENT Food Editor Review of Jams, Bulter Preserves and Conserves For iams and butters, follow the same rules as for making jelly except fruits and not just the juice are used. For jams. Use two-thirds or three-fourths cup beet or cane sugar for each cup of prepared fruit. If prepared pectin is used, follow manufacturer's directions. For bullers. Use one-half to two-thirds cup beet or cane sugar for each cup of fruit and one tablespoon lemon juice. For preserves. Fruits are cooked slowly in sugar syrup until clear. The fruit should hold its shape yet be tender, clear and shiny. Use one cup beet or cane sugar for each cup of fruit. If fruit pectin is used, follow manufacturer's directions. To avoid separation, pour preserves into shallow container and let stand a few hours or over night. Stir occasionally; evaporation causes syrup to thicken. If sugar is added to fruit a few hours in advance of cooking, a syrup is formed and no water need be added. For conserves which is a mix ture of fruit cooked slowly in sugar syrup with nutmeats and or raisins added. Use one cup beet or cane sugar to each cup of fruit. When adding nuts, heat them in a slow oven and add last two to five minutes of cooking. Baked Chicken Supreme Plenty of frying size chickens. And here is another superb way of fixing one or more. Figure four or five servings per ZVz or so pound fryer. 1 frying chicken, cut-up Vz cup fat for frying Vz clove garlic, sliced 1 teaspoon salt V2 cup sliced onion 2 tablespoons flour 2 cups strained, cooked tomatoes, 1 cup dairy sour cream V cup Parmesan cheese Brown chicken in fat and place in casserole. Mash garlic with salt. Cook garlic-salt mixture with onion until onion is trans parent in one tablespoon of the chicken drippings. Blend in flour. Add tomatoes stirring constantly and heat to boiling. Remove from heat. Add sour cream gradually, stirring vigor ously. Blend in Parmesan cheese. Pour over chicken. Cover and bake in a slow oven, 325 degrees, about 45 minutes. Plentiful Pork Has Bargain Cuts Too If pork dinner at your house has been mostly loin or pork chops, you and your budget both have a treat in store. Pork, like all meat has its thriftier cuts that make delicious meals at sur prisingly small cost. Two of the most delicious of the economy cuts are fresh shoulder butt and pork hocks, both of which make good August eating, some folks to the con trary. Fresh pork shoulder butt is a cut "of meat ranging in weight from four to six pounds with a higher percentage of lean to the bone than any other pork cut. It slices well and is roasted much like pork loin. Wipe meat with clean, damp cloth. Season with salt and pepper. Place, fat side up on rack in open roasting pan. Do not cover or baste. Roast in moderate over, 325-350 degrees, 45-50 minutes per pound or until done. Figure three servings to the pound. Braised hocks with vegetables. A fine, flavorful and thrifty meat. Simmer in leisurely fash ion for distinctive flavor. Figure one hock to a person. Sprinkle hocks with salt and pepper. Brown in heavy skillet over low heat for about 30 minutes. Add one cup of water and additional water as needed. Cover and cook slowly until tender, approx imately Wz hours. .For each hock, add one medium size pared potato, two scraped carrots, two small white onions and cook 20 minutes. Add cabbage wedges and cook another 15 minutes. Lemony, Luscious and Easy-to-Make Ice Cream Cooling as a mountain breeze. Well, almost. That's this ice cream that takes no whipping cream but it's smooth and mel low with just-right tartness for summer days. 2 eggs M cup sugar Vi cup white corn syrup Vi cup lemon juice 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind 1 cup milk 1 cup top milk or light cream Beat eggs until thick and lem on colored. Add sugar gradual ly and continue beating until sugar is dissolved. Add remain ing ingredients and blend. Pour into a cold refrigerator tray. Freeze until firm. Break into chunks and place in a chilled bowl. Beat until fluffy. Return to cold tray and freeze until firm. Makes one quart for six to eight servings. And The Cooking Is Easy If You Check Market Report A quick review of the abund ance of good things rnentioned in this market report will give you plenty of good ideas for meal planning and easy cooking. Scan the food advertisements today. Plenty of fresh and frozen fresh halibut and salmon from Pacific waters make superb eat ing, both hot and cold. Require less than 10 minutes of cooking when filleted or in steaks. Other plentiful and good eating fish include swordfish, rock fish fil lets, scallops. Meat and Poultry Beef continues plentiful with bargain prices continuing on ground beef and the long, slow cooking cuts. Pork is increas ingly plentiful and it too has its economy cuts which are well displayed. Look them over. Luncheon meats or cold cuts make satisfying eating not only in sandwiches but in a "help yourself" meat and cheese plat ter assortment along with re bread and butter, crisp relishes, dill pickles. Plentiful frying size chickens are very good buys for enjoying hot from frying pan, broiler or barbecue or served cold with bread and butter sandwiches at picnic or supper table. Egg Reminder Nutritionists remind us that daily diet should include at least one egg. If breakfast doesn t in clude eggs, offer them hard cooked added to green and other vegetable salads or make egg salad sandwich fillings. Remem ber that Grade B eggs cost con siderably less; are ideal for all uses except frying, scrambling, poaching, soft cooking in the shell. Remember too that egg whites for beating lightly for ingredient uses should be held at room temperature for a bit for best results. Canning and Freezing Again we say, talk over plans with your local fruit and vege table man. He is just as inter ested as you are in moving pro- ffl. ABIES MAR 22 5. AC 20 65-66-74 76-77 I MAY 21 J 1-12-23-34 5-67.80-84 GEMINI V"UJUNE22 YT 8-19-30-41 CANCER JUNE 23 miO-21-29-33 My9-62-83-89 LEO JULY 24 AUG. 23 3-U-25-34 347-59-70 AUG 24 SEPT. 22 ? 2-13-24-33 SJ46-61 -82-90 S TAR GAZER Bv CLAY R. POLLAN' Your Daily Activity Guide Accordno to the Stars. To develop message for Saturday, read words corresponding to numbers of your Zodiac birth sign. 1 Advance - 31 Early 2 You 32 Belongings 3 Today 33 Find 4 Opoosit 34 Your 5 Look 35 Bad 6 Talk 36 For 7 Don't 37 Rather 8 Steer 33 Take 9 Make 39 And 10 Be 40 Eelonging 11 You'll 41 Gossip 12 Some 42 Morning 13 May 43 Or 14 Looks 44 Yourself 15 Sex 45 Favorite 16 Over 46 Judgment 17 Things 47 Dealings 18 Misloy 48 Attracted 19 Clear 49 Initiative 20 An 50 Reach 21 Prepared 1 51 A LIBRA SEPT 23 Tl OCT 23w 4-15-26-37V" U8-56-79-87V2 22 Probably 23 Of 24 Show 25 Good 26 Seems 27 Old 28 Over 29 To 30 Of Good 52 And 53 Checkup .54 Lose 55 Spending 56 To 57 -Petty 53 On 59 With 60 Too I?) Adverse 61 Or 62 In 63 Your 64 Aggressive 65 Action 66 Helps 67 Proiects 63 Discussions 69 Agreements 70 Women 71 Much 72 Surprise 73 Pocketbook 74 You 75 Solve 76 Some 77 Problems 78 Today 79 You 80 And 81 Money 82 Be 83 Your 84 Awaits 85 You 86 Interests 87 Today 83 Matters 89 Circle 90 Extravcgant 820 eutral SCORPIO OCT 24 Qgj NOV. 22 9-20-31-421 03-58-81-83 SAGITTARIUS NOV 23 I DEC. 22 5-16-27-40 51-72-84-85 Si I CAPRICORN DEC 23 JAN 20 hi -22-33-44 B5-60-71 AQUARIUS JAN. 21 FEB. wJpKj 7-18-32-43 54-63-73 VS- PISCES FEB 20 MAR. 21 6-17-28-39 & 50-69-78 As We Live By ELIZABETH HURLOCK, PH.D. "Right Type of Man" For Girl To Decide What a mother considers the "right type of man for her daugh ter may not be what the daugb ter consid e r s "right." (Q) "I was shy and oft en heartbrok e n when I was young because the boys I liked didn't show any interest in me. I mar thought I was , good man and Dr. Herlock ried a man I in love with I devoted in many ways but I found out 25 years ago what I thought was love was not. My life has not been a happy one, and I want my daughter, who is 19, to avoid what I went through. I have given her chances to go around, these pitfalls, but it is no good. She wouldn't go to college but has gone to work. The young men she meets are not desirable, but she doesn't bring them home so we can meet them. She talks to them in town when she goes out with her girlfriends. Because she can't or won't talk on subjects young college persons talk about, she ignores college youth. How can I make her see that she is heading for the same mistake I made?" ' (A) tirst. you are making a mistake when you stress the fact that a college man would make a more desirable husband for your daughter than one who did duce at peak season when price is lowest. Plan to "put up' fresh foods same day you pur chase them, if possible. Vegetables Galore Just about everything but for menu planning purposes we sug gest corn which is of excellent quality, green beans, cacrots, Bell peppers, green onions and radishes, dry onions, potatoes, Italian squash. Keep luscious, vitamin-rich tomatoes on hand for eating throughout the day, chilled "as is," in salads. Broil tomatoes with crumb or cheese topping. Fresh Fruits Watermelons, c a n t a loupes, most varieties of peaches, plums, small oranges, grapes in increas ing quantity and variety. Grav enstein apples, Bartlett pears, fancy melons. F l US, TOtKS J BE SURE TO ATTEND THE 4-H CLUB- F.F.A. LIVESTOCK AUCTION SALE AT THE FAIRGROUNDS TONIGHT, 7:30 p.m. You Do the Buying We Do All the Rest We Pick Up - Slaughter - Deliver Hertford City Est. No. I Inspected USDA Graded edford Meat Co. M not go to college. There are many fine husbands who have never stepped inside a college, just as there are college men who make very poor husbands. Second, you are wrong in con demning the young men your daughter knows as "undesirable" without having met them. The reason she does not want to bring them home is doubtless that she knows how you feel about her marrying a college man and she wants to avoid embarrassing situations. The only way you can hope to help your daughter avoid Prisoners of War May Now Receive Benefits Washington (U.R) Prison er of war benefits now extend to American citizens captured while serving in the military of United States allies after Dec. 7, 1941. Commissioner Pearl Carter Pace, of the Foreign Claims Set tlement commission said: "American citizens serving in the military or naval forces of any government allied with the United States during World War II, who were held as prisoners of war ... by any government ... . with which such allied gov ernment has been at war, subse quent to (Dec. 7, 1941) ... are now eligible for prisoner of war benefits." Commissioner Pace emphasiz ed that all claims must "under law be filed on or before Aug. 31." "Compensation is authorized up to S2.50 per day, she said. Payment will be made from seized assets of enemy govern ments during World War II. Friday, August 19, 1955 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUJIE THUS Sun Glasses Said To Be Highway Accident Cause Boston (U.R) Sun glasses can be a cause of death on the highway. Jean O'Brien, an American Automobile Association official, said that, "too many motorists forget to remove their glasses at night." Others, she said, persist in the mistaken belief that tinted glass es will -cut down the glare of approaching headlights. "It may be true during the few seconds another car's head lights are shining directly in your eyes," she said, "but the moment the car passes you're nearly blind." making a mistake in choosing a husband is to encourage her to bring the young men she knows home, so you can get to know them. Why not ask her i to invite them to dinner, for i Sunday night supper,' or have ! a small, informal party with j some of the girls she knows and j tneir ooytrienasv Then if you have reason to believe that these young men are "undesirable" you can point out why. (Copyright 1955, General Features Corp.) For Best Results! Use Tribune Want Ads PLANT THESE NOW! Sale of Evergreen HARDY Azaleas (in containers) All Colors (even purple) Were $2.00 $49 12 for Now $15.00 Garden Center Nursery (Formerly NEWHALL'S) Mi. So. of Phoenix Pacific Hiway Men Trove 86,000 Miles For College Degrees Pjttsfield, Mass. (U.R) Imagine traveling 86,000 miles to get your college degree! Two Pittsfield men have com muted that distance between here and Troy, N.Y., during the past 10 years to study at Rens selaer Polytechnic Institute. They received bachelor of mech anical engineering degrees at the June commencement. The men, Leonard R. Spencer and William E. Fessenden, both 38, have attended the evening classes at RPI three nights week for the past 10 years. Tht' the time required to complete the regular four-year cedemic course in mechanical engineering. Dead line for Sunday CIaMifi4 Ik at noon Saturday. STOP in and See Our New 1956 Admiral ELECTRIC RANGES "Dial Any Heat" Surface Unit Controls fa Superspeed Surface Units fa King Size Rotary Roaster -jfc- Plug-in Flex-o-Grill , For pancakes, ham burgers, Bacon, Eggs, chops TRADE IN YOUR PRESENT RANGE NOW AT (OUEV'S APPLIANCE STORE 321 E. 6th St., Medford - In the Littrell Parts Building Phone 3-5433 Open Wednesday Until 9 P.M. WW WWW firm m EMM Qo-yov get e ttpe bonuo in tocfeyb top-Qeng Buck 3 . i 1 Allowance You can come in right now on a Buick dividend distribution that's like money in the bank for you. And a look at the nation's new car sales figures will tell you why. This year, Buick is doing far better than just outselling all cars in America except the two most widely known smaller ones. This year, Buick sales are soaring past every high-water mark in the book past 600,000 cars and we're still going strong. So we're declaring an extra divi dend for you. On top of the long trade-in allowances we have been making all year, we're adding a profit-sharing bonus allowance. But you'll be getting a lot more than a great deal. u'll be getting a great car the hottest-selling Buick in history. Ilou'11 be getting Buick's far-in-advance styling, Buick's mightiest V8 power, Buick's highly envied all-coil-spring ride, Buick's extra size and room and comfort and solidity of structure. And you'll be getting the performance thrill of the year Variable Pitch Dynaflow the switch-pitch transmission that's taken the country by storm. Come in today and see for yourself that there's never been a car like this before and never a deal so easy to make. Variable Pitch Dynaflow is the only Dynaflow Buick builds today. It is standard on ROADMASTER, optional at modest extra cost on other Series. 7firioftha ye&fe Buick- Biggest-selling Buick in History ! o DRIVE FROM FACTORY SAVE UP T0 $3300 See Your BUICK Dealer WHEN BETTER AUTOMOSIUS ARE BUM BUtCtC Will BUMS THEM SE&n&JKEIft'S ABASES o G O O O O o o o Just Telephone 2-6229 143 SOUTH RIVERSIDE PHONE 2-6265 o