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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 27, 1956)
Kansas Woman Killed in Crash South of New Era Oregon C: -- . 5 A Kar.sa m'hpr 'as k:!r :n a ri,::nn last niaht tha ir:';r'i 10 o'hers on Hichwav !SK srio-it half a mile south r-f Era Mrs Laura ik-ii" Thompson. 35. of Lrbo. Kan . v. as 'i'-a'i f"i arrival at D'x-1'.rs b..pfal tn Oregon Civ.. Hf r i -:,;.,''!. I'.an Thompson. 4:, ririvir .f ti.'-ir car, was tak'n to S' Vmrent hospital in P'T-'arrl :'(. jaw arid hn'h !: frae-urec! Both cars oeriirii'-fi and sev era! pa? nur v. r f thrown o In ire 'I i.-:! ; .-on c.r v. ere their U-ear-'.W tv.-tu riuMrrn. Patrick and pn'ricia arid Floyd Robert. 13. Msam J. Branstetter, Barry Braiv RruristPi'T, of Camas. 'ah. Thfv sufferer! rr.ouy cu's and bruits, ai' Rranstcttor's ria :2d Barrv arm was broken. Arm. Leg Broken Georae Fisher, about 2". land. riri cr of tr," other ra if- fr-rcd a brok'Ti i' z and Larry Wekion Zoar:ns about 20. P"rt land, riding vvi'h him. suffered a broken arm. Deputy Sheriff Torn Cn'.-forth osid the cars collided in ihe Thompson lanr of traffic A wit ness, Edsar Tweed of Monitor, told the- ri.-pu". sheriff that Fisher s car passed him in a four lane section of tiie hishwa.v. Which then narrowed to three lanes. As he rounueri a c ir.c. Tueod said ho saw the Fisher car slide on the ravel shoulder. lDn shoot hack across tne hit;h wav and into the Thomp.-on ear. The Thompsons were vacation ing in Oregon, and were en route In Camas when the crash occur red. Six Escape Crash Of Navy Bomber Whidbey Wand. Wash. 'U P A Navy rr.'Tv" P-2V5F "Nep tune" patrol bomber crashed on take-off at. the Naval air station Of Whidbey island yesterday but ail six crew members escaped with only minor injuries. The plane veered out of con trol while traveling down the run way at about fi.1 miles n hour V hen the left jet cnine failed. The pilot. l,t. Charles E. Friek fnn. Cpland, Calif., said he lost nose wheel steermj when the engine sputtered out. The aircraft, powered by tw-o tct. engines and two piston en gines, spun some TiOO yards into a mall marsh on the et side of the runway and burst into Pomes. The njht wing was broken off. Pose officials said the ere. men were climbing out of the plne when a crash crew arrived with fire fighting equipment. Th plane was stationed a Sand Point Naval base at Seattle on two weeks trainine mission from Los Alamitns. Calif. It was at the Whidbey hase to load rorkets for a practice rocket run in toe Whidbey range. Use Tribune Wanf Acs For Best Resulfs! iasy, Just Dial 2-6?4! KM ' '"ft. it mm . i 1st PWZE EACH WEEK MERCURY MONTCLAIR PHAETON plus all-expense paid trip to N'pw York for two via American Airlines suite at Waldorf Astoria guest of Ed Sullivan at his show. $10,000 CASH to buyers- Awarded Phaeton if you buy a diinnc enn'st and vfnrr of winning one of the 10 top YOU CAN ENTER EVERY WEEK . . . here's all you dol 1 Go to your Mercury dealer today. 3 Complete last line of Mercury Phaeton rhyme. 2 Pick up Official Rules and Entry Blank. 4 Mail Official Entry Blank to "Mercury Contest'. Feeding the Family By ZOLA Food Deep Dish Peach Pie The time ha corr.e for a fresh peach p:e and he i.es :r.: Kf rer Ae r.r:'.v: ar:-o-. q . ;ck-' oor: : 2 'apioca Sarr.e h: zr,f for berrv p:es hr 'he wav. No pre-cr-nWir.z. j.-' m.: '.e ;-p.orn v. ;"n tr.e s :ar and ;'--e fr- a-d poi.r ir;xv.rp ir'" nn unha'r.eri pie -heii and bake as usuai. Easy as tr.at. For this rier p d;-h peach pie. vo i need pas'ry for a oi.i -cr;.-t p:e for toppir.j; I" a .,: z nowi. con-tjme i tai -r:s 'r.i'"k-cofjk:n? tap. oca. :', -i'. ;:-:n c::p cranniated sigar. i,..--ha.f c:jp brown suar, one-f i j r." ;i 'ca- oon niar-e. fo ir (::, shrrd fresh pf-ar-hes and t'.'.o t;,o- spoo;:s jen.on 'j-ores T .rn :,,, a fixfi.2 : ri -; . or parable sie baktnc otsri. dot with on" tabir-poon 'nutter. :-.;! pastry for one rrust in'o '. 1 :n tj square. Cut slits to pern.it ti-am 'o es-ape and a-iji.-t, oiieri.tiL' siits with knife. Pre--; p;,.s':-y to r.rn of ri:-h. Ba.e no' r:':. 42a ri e ref ahfii.t -'.a n.:r:'.os. Serve vsr'TV Some i;;. o, j : t - s eri an, o- to to;-. ; :e -a :' -i . ft !. .t in 11a if e c. r ..in Apriccconut Pudding A f;ne way to use up seine ,f those hiseiou.s aprieois. This can he marie n da- aitrad. krr p; -r !I. Surprise ingredient is sr.da (rack rs. Uses l:v poiinris of fresh apricots I'hrre c.ips wriep cut up,. Serve cold Uitli wh'p;:ed cre,-,m. S;: .sr-r'.iiis (,f i:neria t i-.-e ea t i P.z Crumb Mix. Melt one - third cup butter. Combine one cup coarse!;.' crushed soda nack'-rs iH single cra('k''r '. one ,p -hrerl'lr ri coconut, one-half cup beet or cane suar. one-fourth cup bro'A ri str'ar. firiiii;.' iiarherl. Mix horrut:h!' with the melted butter. Set asioe. Pudding Mix. Beat together two ecc oks (use r-zz whites later!, one cup sucar, four table spoons all-purpose flour and arid threp cups cut-up aprirot- Cook 1- t. s Hi " ' M T 4 HIGH SPIRITS Vice Presi dent Richard Nixon appears jovial after White House meeting with legislative leaders and the President. Earlier. Massachusetts Gov ernor Christian Herter, who was boosted as vice presi dential candidate bv Harold Stassen. announced in Bos ton that he will be ' hon ored'' to renominate Nixon as Ike's running mate. The use of domestic turkey? an a source of meat has more than tripled in the U.S. in re cent vears. r i a I-1 t 7 80 MERCURY PHAETONS IN ED SULLIVAN'S $425,000 MERCURY CONTEST JUNE 11th AUGUST 4-th 2nd - 10th PRIZES EACH WEEK 9 MERCURY MONTEREY PHAETONS . . . plus 25 G.E. port-able TV sprs, litrht, easy to carry . . . 300 E'i;in American Signet automatic cigarette lighters enrh vrt. SPECIAL. BONUS AWARDS new Mercury instead of n p w $2,000 cash tousedcar buyers Awarded in nsiiitlirm to new FhapTnn if you buy a used car durint; comest and fiefrrre being advised of winning one of the 10 top weekly prizes. new Mercury heme advised weekly pnzes. S Ofttrl fT 8!-l r teJ) VINCENT Editor in double boiler over boilip.n wa'rr for 10 minutes, stirring r o.-.stan'iy. Hemove from beat; s";r in 'wo tablespoons butter. Con!. S"iff!y he;ft the two czz w'm'es and fold in'o pudding rr. ::; re Snroah half of the crumb mix in an e;sht-inch wpi! buttered si : a re ran. Pour in pudding mix. Sprinkle remaining crumb mix on top. Bake in slow oven, '125 rh-rreos f . , r 4a mmu'es. Seafood and Pickles Ze-.tful Combination Dei ir-irtus cucumber pickles of ah s;os, iwret. sour and dill crh :.roo surrmer meals. The ;e" flavors of different kinds of fish and shellfish hlend well wi'-i ttic tang of pickles in wax s Cut sweet pickles into small Pieces and add to mayonnaisp for quir k tar'ar sanep to serve a;';i fr: ri. baked or broiled fish. Cu-n;.Mi fish' loaves and souf fles v. l'li sliced dill pickles. Add chopped sweet or sour pi' kh in tuna, salmon and other fish salads, sandwich fillers. Arid chopper pickles to stuff ing for baked fish or fish "bur:-- When you broil fish, springle chopped pickle river top before sliding fi.-n under broiler. Garnish fish fnup!: and chowd ers with sprinkling of minced pickles. Corn Chowder Mainstay Here's an especially ood corn chowder for a hot luncheon or supper mainstay. Made from freshly cooked corn or leftover corn from yesterday's cobs. You can u-e leftover cooked ham or canned luncheon meat for the meat part. Or omit 1 ho meat Mine bacon gives eood flavor. 1'i.in on seconds ail thp way rtiouriu ana mis will satisiy live or six persons. a siltes bacon, diced '.2 cup cooked ham or luncheon meat, cuhpd (optional) 1 smail onions. F'uced 3 medium potatoes, cubed 1 can tomato soun 2 cups fresh or whole kernel corn 1 ' 2 cups milk .1 cups hot water Salt arri pepper Brown tile bacon and onion: and the potatoes, hotwater and salt. Cook until potatoes are lender; add the corn, soup and asonincs. Bring to simmer; add bi!k and meat and continue simmcrina for a few minutes. Serve with plcntv of crackers. Chilled Soup. For each threes servings, combine 1 cup tomato .mice, onp cup top milk, dash of tanasco. one tablespoon minced chives or onion tops and one tablespoon minced celery. Chill tiiorouahly. Float blob of sour cream, if you like. Best Buys Listed Here Make Easy Meal Planning Meal planners who scan these columns will find scores of sug gestions for pleasing the family; all tn be found in abundance at reasonable cost along with many genuine bargains. Nature is good to growers in our part of the country. Many of the items enjoyed now are grown locally; others travel fast from nearby states and are in local stores within hours of harvesting. Poultry. Stewing chickens are bargain priced: so are broilers and fryers. Turkeys of all sizes are good buys. Put in freezer supplies if freezer space permits. Much Meat. Plenty of beef with very low' prices on all ruts that require long, slow rooking. Seann for thi i popularity of tender cu's which cook quickly. Ground beef is bargain. Beef liver is an excellent item that should appear on tables more often. Plenty of onions available to go with liver and bacon. Lamb prices are down a little with breast of lamb at practical ly rock bot'om for barbecuing or for oven braising to crispness with only salt and pepper added. Low cost sparenbs nf pork will delight many a family, braised, barbecued, or stuffed with one of those packaged stuffings or with sauerkraut. Rabbits make good eating at very low cost. Fish and Shellfish. Plenty nf west coast caught fish, both fresh and frozen; flounder, snip, hal ibut, mackerel, rock bass, rock fish, salmon, sandabs. sea bass, shrimp, clams. Packaged frozen fish sticks, fish cakes, breaded shrimp, fillets and steaks are favored by many for quick fix ing. Canned tuna is bargain priced. Keep plenty of lemons on hand. Vegetable Buys. Celery of superb quality is practically a give-away. Cucumbers, large sweet bell peppers, cauliflower, i lettuce, romaine. cabbage, rad ishes, green onions, carrots, dry onions, corn are low priced. So are ail varieties nf soft squash. More tomatoes coming. Fruit Buys. Plenty of variety for enjn ing fresh. Keep in touch 1 1 See Your . , . with frutt men for best buying time for ail home freezing, cann ing, jam and jelly making. Bananas, apricots, seedless grapes, smail oranges, strawber ries. Cantaloupe and watermelon for daily eating. Santa Rosa plums are a delight. Elberta peaches make marvelous des serts. First of thp Gravenstein apples for green apple pie. Good bush berry variety but bargains unlikely. Uncooked Jam Proves Successful: Needs Refrigeration Thp subject of uncooked jams has interest for many and here is a report on the subject as marie recently by home econ omists of the U.S. Department of Agriculture who arp especial ly interested in home utilization of our plentiful fruits. Strawberries, raspberries, blackberries. blueberries and peaches proved successful for making uncooked jam with fruit pectin. This type of jam is very easy to make. It has flavor and color, spreads well. It keeps in the refrigerator for a few months or in the freezer for as long as a year but because it is uncooked, it will not keep on the kitchen shelf. Too have jam at best, use promptly after opening the container. Two points are made. If finish ed product is too firm when opened for serving, stirring will soften it. If it tends to seperate. A NEW APPLIANCE With A a m,&epn home ah9 ci EgE 5E EE Kl-'J QggQps? PUSH-BUTTON WEATHER in your home is yours with a modern home oir conditioning unit! REVERSE CYCLE ACTION means that you set a thermostat and your home air conditioner does the rest. When day time heat and humidity demand it you automatically gel dry, clean, circulating cool oir. In the cool morning ond evening hours, your home oir conditioner reverses itself automatically and gives you fresh, circulating worm air. COMFORTABLE LIVING . . . HEALTHFUL LIVING ore yours with o modern home air conditioner. Clean, filtered, dust-free, pollen-free circulating air lets you sleep better . . . look better . . . feel better . . . live better! MODERN HOME AIR CONDITIONERS COST NO MORE THAN OTHER MAJOR APPLIANCES CAN BE INSTALLED AS EASILY AS YOUR WASHER DRYER OR RANGE COMPACT AND HANDSOME, THEY FIT ANY HOME DECOR. Favorite Appliance Deoler Ask About Easy Term THE CALIFORNIA Friday. July 27. 1958 stirring will blend it again. Jam Making For jam of finest color and flavor, use fully ripe but sound fruit, sorted and washed. Remove caps and stems from berries and peels and pits from peaches. Grind blueberries but Crush other berries or peaches. To make about nine six-ounce glasses of jam. use three cups NOW! IT COSTS TO BUY THE Makes You Your Own Weatherman IN ONE EASY INSTALLATION ! to protect your health and protect your disposition . . . aw CDitdifiott QBIGON POWER MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEN i crushed fruit. This takes about a quart of blueberries. 1 1 2 to two quarts of other berries or 22 pounds of peaches. Add five cups sugar to three i cups crushed fruit; mix well and I allow to stand 20 minutes with ; occasional stirring. Dissolve one ! package powdered pectin in one cup water, bring to boil and boil ; 1 minute. Add the pectin solu NO MORE BEST! California SWEET RED PURE GRAPE WINE fTl WINI CO., SAN FRANCISCO. CAltP. Crater Beverage Company ( .- .-- ( r " 3 3- y STRETCH V 1 9 Coot Aaa 21 Take Your 1 rr if I' COMPANY tion to the fruit and sugar mix ture and stir 2 minutes. Ladle jam into sterilized jelly glasses or the new wide-mouthed half ipint jars, filling to about a hall inch of the rim. Cover and let j stand until jellied which may ; take 24 to 48 hours. Then seal 1 with hot paraffin and cover with 1 metal lid. Put in freezer or ; refrigerator promptly. Petri EH Choice!