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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1957)
TWO MEDFCHD (OREGON) 1 1 ' tv; kf:-V Jc v A ' DIPS AWD DUNKS Party maneuvers nowadays center around dir and dunks with a variety of dippers as teen-age party givers and goers frolic, rejoicing in school-year's end and diplo ma acquired. Plenty of ice cold punch and bottled soft drinks are a must. Ideaa for party givers of all ages are included in today's food columns. Feeding the Family By ZOLA Variety of Dipi. Dunks and Dip - prs Key to Succes of Teen-Age Parties We askd a group of teen - Bg'Ts busy planning graduation partios what they thought was the most important food to be erved on auch n occasion. The unanimous answer was. "Plenty of dips, dunks and a variety of things to dip with. A good punch md or lots or bottled soft drinks, dependent on how for ir.al the party is." With this in mind we did a bit more research and would like to share some of the results with you. Complimentary Dips. Dippers Create Flavor Combination Instead of relying exclusively on crackers and potato chips for dipping, these recipes were dev eloped to feature dippers to com pliment each dip. True most of them take well to crackers and potato chips too. but the sug gested dippers will add glamour and flavor interest your guests will long remember. Cloud White Lemon Dip Celery stalks cut in easily handled pieces, cherry tomatoes with blossom end left on, and cauliflowerettes are dell ghtful with this- Keep vegetables well chilled. 2 cups sour cream 8 tablespoons horseradish ''4 cup fresh lemon juice 2 tablespoons finely chopped on ion cup finely chopped celery Pmch of salt Combine all ingredients and mix well. Oraege Avocado Dip The dippers in this case are orange wedges. Slice unpeeled oranges into cartwheel shapes; cut each slice into wedge-shaped pieces and arrange on bed of crushed ice or on large platter with bowl of mix in center. The bit-size wedges are just right for eating without dripping. 2 ripe avocados 1 tablespoon grated onfon cup fresh lemon juice 1 3 cup mayonnaise 1 teaspoon salt i teaspoon fresh chili powder Cayenne pepper to taste 4 slices bacon Mash avocado and combine with onion, lemon juice, may onnaise, salt, chili powder, cay enne pepprr and bacon that has been fried crisp and crumbled. Pile- into attractive bowl; sur round with orange slices. Artichoke Hollandaise Dip Artichokes, easy to prepare. dflicious to eat. will add variety ; to any party. To prepare articho-1 kes for dipping, trim stems ing one-half inch. Remove out Mde lower leaves. Cut off thorny leaf tips. Tie leaves to keep in shape. Eotf 35 to 30 minutes or until heart is tender when pierced with a fork. 'S cip butter 6 egg yolks, beaten slightly x4 cup hot water '-i teaspoon gait r cup irvs lemon Juice Dash cayenne pepper Ve't butter m top of double boiler ever hot (not hoiling) water. Stir hot 8ter into slight- canned sundae toppings, chop iy bea'ei ee yolks Gradually ped nuts, chocolate syrup, mo sfce ir.lo melted butter. Cook lasses, sweetened instant cocoa iOtil mixture begina to thicken. Remove from hept and add a few jftains of cayenne pepper, salt and lemon juice gradually, t If sauce .arts to curdle, beat vig orously with rotary beater until smooth and creamy.) Makes ap-1 Hi-Fi Brownies Go proximately two cups sauce. I With Platter Chatter Lemonated Sugar. A tasty ' It's a party whenever two or sweet coating that is ideal for! more young people get together dipping luscious s-f r S w berries. ; to listen to records. . .whether tangy oranee wedges, or other j its for rock 'n roll or Rachman desired fruits. Mix four table-, inoff served up on the platter, spoons coarsely grated 1 e m on ; As long as there are boys around peel with ne cup granulated any girls knows that its "real sugar. Mix thoroughly and let ; ready" to have a platter of sub stand for oil to be absorbed by ' stantial cookies to go the rounds, the sugar. 'Like these brownies, for in-' Graduation Party Punch stance. This fresh fruit punch is easy ' For moist chewy brownies, , MAIL TRIBUNE 1 6, ft VINCENT Editor 1 to make and will be enjoyed for t its piquant refreshing 11a v or. G;irnish prettily with fresh s t r a w b e r rics, lemon and or j orange wedges. Makes approxim- ately enough to fill 50 punch ; cups. j 2 cups (1 pound) sugar j 8 cups water j4 cups fresh lemon juice i 2 tablespoons grated lemon peel 8 cups fresh orange juice 2 quarts sparkling water Ice Lemon, orange, strawberry garn ish Make syrup by boiling sugar and water together for about five minutes. Cool. Add fruit juices and grated peel. Just before serv ing pour over ice in punch bowl and add the sparkling water. Garnish with fresh fruits. Note: To carry out school col ors or other color motif, make ice cubes colored appropriately with pure vegetable food color ing. Famed Party Sandwich Loaf When several people are party-planning, some one is sure to ask, "Does anyone know how to make one of those sandwich loaf things?" Now you'll know if you clip this out and have it handy. Figure a loaf for each 10 servings. Trim crust from day-old loaf unsliced bread. Cut lengthwise into four even slices. Spread first slice with Ham Filling, second with Liver Filling, third with Tongue Filling. Place one on top the other and top with remaining bread slice. Ham Filling. Combine and mix thoroughly one small can ham spread, two tablespoons chop ped stuffed olives, one-half tea spoon prepared mustered and one tablespoon mayonnaise. Liver Filling. Combine one small can liver paste, one-half teaspoon minced onion one tablespoon mayonnaise and one chopped hard cooked egg. Tongue Filling. Combine one small can tongue spread, two tablespoons chopped pickle and one tablespoon mayonnaise. Sandwich F r o s 1 ing. Cream four three-ounce package of cream andor sherbet. If you one-half cup light cream, blend ing until spreading consistency. Frost top and sides of loaf. Dec orate in flower designs with green pepper, radish slices, pi miento andor ripe olive slices. School Parties If its a "school" party, see if you can find ice creams andor sherbets in the school colors. Then at dessert-time set out a big leav-ibowl of generous scoops of ice cream ana or snervet. it you have a freezer it is a good idea to scoop ice cream out early in the day and put on a wax pa per covered tray and put in the freezer to harden. Then at serv ice time you just scoot a spatula under each, a flick of the wrist, and you're through in practical ly no time. You'll need about l'j quarts for eight eaters. Arrange a lazy suzan or pass a tray of assorted toppings such as drain- ed canned crushed pineapple. powder, maraschino cherries and their juice. . or what ever else you can think of. Let the guests take over, each producing their own super sundae creation. This is always a success. Thursday. June 6, 1957 Graham Tells How Appointment Kept; Garden Searched New York W Billy Graham told 18,000 persons how they could keep their "appoint ments with God and be saved" Wednesday night. Only three hours before police had combed Madison Square Garden for what they feared a bomb plant ed to explode during the ser mon. The audience was unaware that 25 policemen had searched the Garden for a possible bomb after a janitor found a note in the lobby that said in part "A lot of people will be kill." Didn't Just Happen Graham said that the woman at the well in Samaria (John 4-1) did not "just happen to be there and Christ did not just happen to pass through Samaria He didn't have to go through Samaria because He was a Jew and the Jews and Samaritans hated one another. "He went to Samaria to save that woman. It's the same here tonight. You didn't have to come here but you had a divine ap pointment with God. Every time I stand here I know someone is here by God's appointment." Following the North Carolina Baptist minister's plea to his lis teners to keep their "appoint ments with God." 622 persons recorded "decisions for Christ," bringing Graham's New York Crusade total in 22 days to 12.- 684. More than 392,500 persons have attended his sermons. bake about 25 minutes; for cake like brownies, bake 30 minutes or so. 2 squares unsweetened chocolate 13 cup butter or other shorten ing 23 cup sifted flour 4 teaspoon salt 'i teaspoon baking powder 2 eggs, well beaten 1 cup sugar 15 cup broken walnut meats 1 teaspoon vanilla Heat oven to 350 d e g r e es, moderate. Grease 8 x 8-inch pan. Melt chocolate and butter over hot water. Sift some flour onto waxed paper, measure the re quired two-third cup of it and add salt and baking powder; sift together- Beat eggs in bowl, add sugar gradually, beating well. Add chocolate mixture and blend. Add flour and stir thoroughly; stir in nuts and van illa. Spread in pan and bake 25 to 30 minutes as indicated above. Let cook in pan; cut in squares. Silver dollars are rare in most of the US but still are found in western states such as Nevada and Montana. PRICES EFFECTIVE Thurs. Eve., Fri., Sunkist Cucumbers, Radishes & Onions LETTUCE Giant w esson Oil qt. Chunk Style White Star 111. l.m-'HimnS.n. ,1,1.1 1. UHWWWWHWW 1 J-.. .; m ! FF;" -' r -' ' TEARING BLIMP FKO.M MAST, atomic detonation blasts into sky at Nevada test site. Second of 1957 series, it was equivalent to 2,000 tons Of Small Device Could Quickly Alert People To Approaching Storm Kansas City, Mo. W The Southwest's unprecedented string of tornadoes has spurred work on a tiny device which could alert 95 per cent of Ameri can homes in seconds and be used for civil defense as well as storm warnings. Dr. Charles N. Kimball, head of the Midwest Research Insti tute which has been developing the device for 18 months, says it should be ready for the mass market in about two years. In Each Home It is about the size of a pack of cigarettes, would sell for about $2, would be installed in each home and would operate off the electric system in the community. Equipped with a powerful buzzer, it would be set off by an extra impulse from the local power plant. It could be plugged in with electric clocks or radios which would automatically turn it on or it could be operated in dependently in which case it would have to be turned on all the time. "We need more research to iron out technical problems." Kimball says, "but the power companies say the plan is feas ible. With thi! throw of a signal, nearly all homes in the nation could know of an emergency in lb. Bag E110NS TUNA 3: T.I, (International) ! seconds. That's based on the fact that more than 95 per cent of all people in the U.S. now use electric power." Kimball says the next move is to conduct a demonstration nrnippt fnr Iho ilm-in in ,,' I of about 100,000. A place for the demonstration will be an nounced soon. Separate Warning Sounds Midwest Research has been working on the device under a contract with the Civil Defense Administration. It is believed separate warning sounds could be worked out for tornadoes and for air alerts. " Te device looks .like a minia ture radio set, Kimball says. "It has a couple of little tubes, copper coil, a buzzer and trans istors," he says. "There also are tiny circuits printed with me tallic ink a process common in electronics. "This way you can make the devices very intricate and very small and you can mass produce them." RAINS HIT KYUSHU Tokyo IB Drenching pre monsoon rains and floods hit Kyushu Wednesday, leaving three persons dead, three miss ing and one injured, reports reaching here said today. Sal.-Wa Reserve (he U.S. No. 1 California New 2 FOR i if J 1Qchead , i i&7cK Public Warned Of Exaggerated Vitamin Claims Housewives and consumers in the Medford area should be warned to beware of exag gerated claims of house-to-house vitamin salesmen and "health food lecturers," according to the U.S. Food and Drug administra tion. Particularly, consumers should discount any suggestion that these food supplements can be relied on as treatments for conditions requiring medical at tention, Kenneth E. Monfore. chief of the Seattle district of the administration, stated. Not Against Sales The Food and Drug Adminis tration is not against the sale of vitamins, whetljer house-to-house or by other channels he said, but there is a real danger that the free-wheeling kind of sales manship may persuade people to put off going to a doctor while they try some vitamin and min eral combination. Too many of these agents are using a "scare technique" based on the false idea that our mod ern food supply cannot be re lied on to furnish all the nutri tional elements required by the human body, according to Mon fore The fact is that the Ameri can food supply is the most com plete and nutritious in the world, and the American people have to go out of their way, nutritional ly speaking,, to avoid getting ample amounts of vitamins and minerals, he declared. Law Violation The courts have held that mis leading promotion of food sup plements violated federal law. Oral statements, as well as print ed matter, are covered. Two operators in this field have re cently been convicted and sent enced to prison terms. Cases in volving individual sales agents are under investigation in dif ferent parts of the country. Holmes Signs OTI Reorganization Bill Salem flP) Gov. Robert TJ. Holmes has signed into law House Bill 732 reorganizing Ore gon Technical Institute at Klam ath Falls. The bill, introduced by Rep. John Kerbow, Klamath Falls, broadens authority of the Board of Education over the school and establishes an advisory council of 15 members. The school is authorized schol arships up to two per cent of en rollment and to sell bonds to finance new buildings if money is repaid from donations and does not come from state tax ' revenues. We Give Northern Stamps Righl to Limit Cantaloupes 45 Size Holiday Margarine ool Aid QUETS 10 The Family Ooiiiisll Editor's note: The Family Council consists ot a judge. psyctiiatrlrt, taree clergymen, a newspaper editor, a women's editor and two writer. r.d h article is a summary of an actual report. The Family Council doe- not ci advice; It merely reports on problems Uist have been dealt with by responsible agencies and counselors. Grant K. My daughter and I want a place of our own. Bernice M. He can't be a mother and father to her. Grant K. My wife recently died after having been an invalid for many years .When she first took sick, we went to live with my sister-in-law, Bernice, and her husband. Bernice took care of my wife and practically raised my daughter. veil, now that mv wife is i gone, I've been feeling I'd like to have a place of my own with my daughter. Ina is now 17. She knows a thing or two about housekeeping and says she'd love to have our own place. It's not that we don't love Bernice and appreciate all that she's done for us, it's just that we'd like a change of environment. Bernice was furious when I suggested the idea. She takes the whole thing as an insult and says it would not be "right" for Ina. Of course I don't want to do the wrong thing by my daughter, but I'm not sure Bernice knows what's best. Bernice M. I have been a mother to Ina and I don't want her taken away at the time she is likely to need me most. A girl I of Ina's age needs an older wom an witn wnom sne can talk over her problems. Grant thinks he can be both a mother and father to the girl, but things don't work that way. I know what's really in back of Grant's mind. He would like to get married again and doesn't want me around getting in his way. Then he wouid set up a new home with his wife and Ina. When I accused him of this, he just laughed and told me not to be ridiculous, but I know it's true. He's very selfish. My husband and I have a little boy and We had always thought of Ina as our daughter. We don't want her taken away from us. We wouldn't mid if Grant left by himself, but Ina says she wants to be with her father. The Council: Bernice's reason able argument that Ina needs a mother in her life at this time becomes cancelled out by her subsequent statements. In them she shows enough selfishness and lack of objectivity to disqualify her for the job. She "accuses" Grant of want ing to get married again some thing he has every right to do. It would be a very good idea for him to set up a new home with a wife and Ina. If he feels that Bernice would "get in his way" in his search for a new mate, he I should most certainly, get out of T-Bone or Round 6 A Sirloin or Rib Chop L Shoulder Steak or Roast USDA CHOICE RIB STEAK TASTY WIENERS 3 ibs. FRANKS T 5:$1 J R LI 8 Flavors Each her household. If this is selfishness on Grant's part, it is certainly a more justi fiable brand of the stuff than Bernicj's. Because Bernice is afraid to have Ina taken from her, she would deprive Grant in definitely of a wife and a home to call his own. She is also ready to separate this father and daughter, if she can. despite their expressed desire to remain to gether. Bernice's desire to consider Ina a daughter is understand able, but she should realize that she risks losing all Ina's love and respect by overstepping her rights as an aunt. (Copyright 1957, General Features Corp.) -."' ,- 4fs 5 - iff r.-i DOCTOR OP LAWS John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers, weirs scholastic cap and gown for a ceremony in which he was presented with n honorary Doctor of Laws Degre at West Virginia University in Morgantown. It is the first: degree he has ever received.' Lewis, 77, quit school at 14 to work in the coal mine. aa ' M Vl if A DmST0N w Ncfnc round U33 PACIFIC 16 S. Central Phon SP 3-5308 ' BBBKaVBBBcKaBBEBXB3a iBEST Bim IN TOP QUALITY ik 49' SHURFRESH COTTAGE CHEESE c ted ind fig ce- he - a ist rn id w Qf if i.i 4 G t