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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 6, 1957)
Feeding the Family By ZOLA Food If you've thought only of limes as a beverage ingredient, you've been missing something good. Limes add flavor interest to canape spreads; cause guests to ask "whatever did you do to make these taste so good?" Anchory Butter. Combine one quarter cup butter with one tablespoon anchovy paste, two tablespoons lime juice and a dash of paprika. Chives Butter. Combine one quarter cup butter with 1V4 tablespoons finely minced chives and Hi tablespoons lime juice. Lime Butter. Combine one quarter cup butter with 3 table spoons lime juice, one-quarter teaspoon grated rind. Parsley Butter. Combine one- quarter cup butter, two table spoons finely chopped water cress, lVa tablespoons lime juice and a few drops of Worcester shire sauce. Herbed Halibut Here's a fish story family will like. Choose two pounds halibut steaks or fillets, either fresh of frozen. Herbs will transpose them into a gourmet's delight. Arrange fish on well greased grill. Mix two tablespoons melt ed butter or margarine, juice of one lemon, dash of cayenne pep per. Take your choice of one eighth teaspoon thyme, rose mary, basil or sage or one-quarter teaspoon chili powder or one-quarter teaspoon curry pow der or one-quarter teaspoon paprika or one-quarter teaspoon celery or garlic salt. Add to but ter and lemon juice; spread over fish. Preheat broiler. Broil under moderate heat placing fish about two Inches below heat. Cooks In about 10 minutes. Be careful as always with fish, not to over cook. Or you can oven broil these in 400 degree oven, uncovered the first 15 minutes, then cover with lid or with aluminum foil for another 5 to lOminutes. Tar tar sauce is good with this. Baked Eggplant Santa Cruz Style Eggplant, a member of the potato family, has been grown since remote antiquity. Avail able all year, eggplant is most abundant right now. You're missing a treat if you do not make this a menu item occasion ally. For a dish with zest, pro ceed like this. 1 large eggplant 34 cup flour Salt and pepper 1 teaspoon paprika 2 eggs, slightly beaten 23 cup olive or salad oil 2 medium onions, chopped 1 medium green pepper, diced 1 clove garlic, minced 2 cups (303 can) tomatoes V cup tomato paste 1 teaspoon salt Vfc teaspoon black pepper Vi cup grated Parmesan cheese Lime Gives Distinction Peel and slice eggplant one- TALENT FIRST METHODIST CHURCH First and Wagner Miss Alice May Woolley. pastor Sunday: 9:45 p.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Church service 7 p.m. Junior MYF 7 p.m. Senior MYF 8 p.m. Evening; service Wednesday: 7:30 p.m. Prayer meeting Thnrariav: 7 p.m. Young people's prayer meeting WAGNER CREEK MISSIONARY BAPTIST Sunday: 10 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Preaching; service 7 p.m. Preaching; service 8 p m. Singing service TVinrcrfav: 7 0 m. Bible study and prayer meeting 8 p.m. Singing service RURAL CHURCHES CHURCH OF THE GOOD SHEPHERD EPISCOPAL. Prospect 11:15a .m. Morning prayer with sermon, the Rev. W. B. MacHenry in charge. COMMUNITY BIBLE CHURCH Butte Falls Howard Sirnmonds, pastor Sunday: 9.50 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Morning worship 7 pjn. Evening worship COUNTRY CHURCH Midway Four Corners. Table Rock rd Ernest E. Ralls, pastor Sunday: 10 a.m. Sunday school 11 ajn. Worship service 7:30 p.m. Evangelistic service Thursday. 7:45 pjn. Bible itudy and prayer GRIFFIN CREEK UNION SUNDAY SCHOOL. ( Non-denominational) Griffin Creek Granse Tyley O. Evans, pastor Sunday: 10 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Worship service 7 p m. Bible study at Boyd Law ton home, rt. 1, box 398B. Medford U'pHnMdav: 7:30 p.rh. Bible study and prayer time. Orange. SAMS VALLEY GOSPEL CHURCH (Interdenominational) Sunday: , 10 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Morning worship, Pat Mil ler, speaker 730 p.m. Regular service. Gordon Petterson. speaker Thursday: 7J30 p.m. Bible study and prayer. ROGUE VALLEY SPIRITUALIST CHURCH tj Route 1. Box 161. Gold Hill M. M. Kruse. D.D. Sunday: 8 p.m. Service TRAIL COMMUNITY CHURCH Rev. Ernest Evers, pastor Sunday: 9:45 ajn. Sunday school 11 a.m. Morning worship 730 p.m. Evening gospel service Tuesday: 7:30 p.m. Young people's meeting. Carlton home Wednesdav: 7 30 pjn. Bible study and prayer meeting VINCENT Editor quarter inch thick. Dip slices in flour seasoned with salt, pep per and paprika. Dip in beaten eggs and then in flour again. Fry in one-half cup salad oil until brown on both sides. Saute onions, green pepper and garlic in remaining salad oil until on ions are limp. Add tomatoes, tomato paste, salt and pepper and simmer 10 minutes. Arrange alternate layers of eggplant and sauce in a two-quart casserole, sprinkling each layer with Par mesan cheese and having sauce as top layer. Sprinkle with Parmesan cheese. Bake in preheated mod erate, 350 degree, oven for 30 minutes. Eight servings. Family will come back for more. Pear Gingerbread This is really pear-topped gingerbread but that was a little long for the headline. Make gingerbread according to fa vorite recipe or one of the popu lar mixes. Bake and cut ginger bread into individual servings. Place a fresh or canned pear half on each gingerbread square. Pour a hot lemon sauce over each portion. One of those in stant puddings makes a good sauce for almost any cake and fruit combination, by the way. September Harvest Fills Bins With Melons, Fruits. Vegetables Melons by the million roll to markets as melon growers har vest cantaloupes, casabas, cran- shaws, honeydews, Persians and watermelons. We should warn you that cantaloupes and water melons are slacking off so you'd best enjoy them now at very reasonable prices. Cranshaws are pretty wonderful but not likely to be bargain-priced be cause the variety is new, pro d u c t i o n comparatively low. They're very perishable and come in such big sizes, averag ing six to eight pounds, that many markets are offering eel lophane wrapped halves.fcWe rec ommend them as genuine treat Chill, slice in any preferred way, peel and provide plenty of lemon andor lime wedges alongside. Salt and pepper, of course. Fruit Buys. Peach supplies have passed their peak but will be around for a while. Nectarine best buys are in the medium sizes. Luscious Bartlett pears are fine eaten out-of-hand or try halving, coring and baking them quickly in orange juice with spice sprinkle. Many grape va rieties in market with Thompson seedless and Muscats piled high est. Enjoy Gravenstein apples now. I heir season is short. There are plums and Italian prunes, a few berries, small size oranges, lemons, limes and how about fresh figs for a change? Vegetable Buys. Vegetable dis plays are a joy. Think of one and you're likely to find it. Arti chokes, beans, cabbage, carrots, cauliflower, celery, corn, cucum bers, lettuce in several varieties, bunched .green onions and rad ishes, eggplant, Bell peppers, to matoes, squash varieties, toma toes, onions, spinach. Poultry and Meat. Frying chickens are a bargain and so are turkeys. Watch ads and mar ket displays. If you've a home freezer, put in a few months sup ply. Beef prices are a bit lower. Lamb and pork remain same. Veal is higher. Franklurters, hamburger, cold cuts and canned luncheon meats are budget savers. Fish and Shellfish markets of fer fine variety, both fresh and frozen. Look them over. Try something different. Canned tuna, salmon and sardines are versatile, economical. Dairy Products. American (good old cheddar) cheese is plentiful, reasonably priced. Get out your favorite macroni, souffle, fondue or other cheese recipe. Cottage cheese is fine value. Amphibious Jeep Reaches Anchorage Anchorage (IP) The amphibi ous jeep "Half Safe" arrived here from Homer, Alaska, Wednesday and skipper Ben Car lin said his vehicle left the water for good at Kenai, 120 miles southwest of Anchorage. Carlin, 45, of Monteral, Can ada, made the trip from Homer in a little more than two days. He has now logged almost 10,000 nautical miles by sea and some 27,000 miles on land. He has only to drive across North America to complete his around-the-world journey in the Half-Safe. The skipper and his crewman, Boyd De Mente, 28, Phoenix, Ariz., said they would remain here about two weeks before starting down the Alaska High way. Carlin said the jeep needed extensive maintenace and re fitting. REFUGEES USE CASTLE Copenhagen, Denmark IP) Sixty-seven Polish refugees who "jumped ship" when the Polish liner Batory docked here two weeks ago, settled down today in a castle in the suburbs. Mrs. Dagny Plum put her castle at the refugee's disposal while they await permission to emigrate. More than 50 million tons of bituminous coal were moved over the Great Lakes during the 1953 shipping season. Council Authorizes Contract With Engineering Consultant Contracts with a Corvallis en gineering firm and with insur ance and medical service com panies were approved by the city council last night. The contracts for engineering services was with Cornell, How land, Hayes and Merryfield, which submitted the best offer for designing and preparing plans and specifications for a sanitary sewer system in the Kenwood - Grandview district which was annexed to the city recently. The city administration rec ommended obtaining the firm because use of topographical aerial maps with two-foot con tour intervals presents a new engineering approach, and be cause the city department is pressed with other work, City Manager Robert Duff said. Start About Sept. 15 He added that the firm can start work about Sept. 15, and complete its work by about Nov. 15. A tentative cost of $7,500 for the work is estimated by the engineering department. Contracts for life insurance and medical service for city em ployees also were approved. City officials recommended West Coast Life Insurance com pany provide insurance from Sept. 5, 1957, to Aug. 31, 1958; Rogue Valley Physicians service provide basic medical service for employee and depedent medi cal service between Sept. 5, 1957, and Aug. 31, 1958; and Equitable Life Assurance com pany for major medical during the same period of time. The council postponed action on the dedication of 10th st. between Central and Riverside The Family Council Editor's note: The Family Council consists of a Judge, a psychiatrist, three clergymen, a newspaper editor a women'r editor and two writers Each article Is a summary of an actual report. The family Council does not give advice; it merely reports on problems that ave been dealt with by responsible agencies and counselors. . Rosa T. My husband is in cahoots with my mother. Matthew T. She's a wonder ful woman. Rose T. My mother wants to run my life and the worst of it is that my husband is in cahoots with her. In fact, I sometimes wonder whether he married me for myself or to have her for a mother-in-law. Whatever plans we make, my husband always says, "Maybe we better ask Mother first, hon." Considering that we've been married eight years, I should think we can make out by our selves. We have four children and I want to have more because I always wanted a big family. Imagine how I felt when Matt came home' one day and said, "live been talking to Mother, hon, and she thinks our family is plenty big already. Isn't it time to call it quits?" That really capped the climax as far as .I'm concerned. For years I've been hearing Mother this and Mother that, but when she decides to dictate the size of my family, and my hubsand goes along wih her, that's the end. Matthew T. From the begin ning of our marriage Rose seem ed to resent the fact that her mother and I got along so well. She seemed to expect us to fight. Before I met her mother, Rose said that she was a narrow minded, domineering woman who didn't know how to get along with people. Well, I sure was surprised to see a charming, generous, sen sible woman. My own mother died when I was 10, so it meant a lot to me to have such a nice mother-in-law. Rose was just 18 when we were married and I was only 21, so we were really babes in the woods and I ap preciated all the good advice we got from her. I don't think Rose's mother wants to run anyone's life. She just wants to see us happy. She isn't dictating only making suggestions. She realizes that my income isn't ever going to be very high and things can get pretty tough when you have a real big family. The Council: It's easy to see how it happened, but Matthew was foolish to let himself get caught in the middle of this mother-daughter conflict. Rose Get SILVER DOLLAR Trading Stamps at: OK MARKET Roxy Ann Market ' Craterian Beauty Salon Model Bakery Oil Station aves. until after the council views the property. Improve ments to the street would cost about $9,000, Duff estimated. Asphalt Pavement The dedication involves the Sears, Roebuck and company property. The ordinance accept ing the easement and dedication provides that curbs, gutters and asphalt pavement be installed within a year. Medford Irrigation district property, including a new office building, shop and yards on Barnett rd. was annexed after a public hearing in which no objections were voiced. Bids for construction of a sanitary sewer on Woodlawn drive will be opened at 11 a.m. Monday, Sept. 16, in the city council chambers. The council also adopted an ordinance levy ing assessments for a sanitary sewer in the Verde Hills area. Authorize - Sewer The council authorized a sani tary sewer on Woodlawn drive after a continued public hearing. The assessment method deter mined by the council will be on the basis of one-half connec tion charge and one-half on a square foot basis. The engineer ing department has estimated that the one-half connection basis will be $146.6129 and one half on square foot will be .0075994 cents per square foot. The council authorized a quit claim deed to W. E. Thomas to correct an error made in the description of .property when it was sold to Thomas by the city in 1946. In other action, the council adopted an ordinance amending the sewer connection ordinance. may be very wrong about her mother, but Rose is the woman Matthew is living with, the one he must please. He certainly couldn't expect her to be delight ed by his joining forces with her arch rival. Unfortunately, Matt lost a good opportunity to pour oil on these troubled waters. With a little tact, he could have assured Rose that while she was tops in her sex, her mother wasn't a bad sort either. Rose needed that kind of assurance. Rose is now mature enough, however, to take her husband's attachment to her mother with a grain of humor. She also ought to realize that her own hostility causes her mother to seek con tact with her through Matthew. In other words, if her mother could talk to her directly, with out fear of angry retorts, she would be less inclined to get in to "cahoots" with Mathew. On the other hand, Matthew should recognize that his over dependence on his mother-in-law has led to her to intrude herself too far into the marital picture. Since Matthew and Rose are no longer the youngsters they were eight years ago, it is high time for him to start gently dissolv ing the too-close tie. He should leave it to Rose to decide when to get advice from her mother. (COPYRIGHT 1957. GENERAL FEATURES CORP.) Kelly Loe, Veteran Labor Leader, Dies Portland (IP) Kelly Loe, 76-year-old veteran Oregon La bor leader and former newspa perman, died Wednesday after a brief illness. For 20 years Loe had been associated with labor and had worked on various civic com missions. Loe retired in 1954 from his position as assistant secretary and public relations director of the Oregon State Federation of Labor. He was the author of one book and co-authored a book with Richard L. Neuberger, now a U. S. Senator, "An Army of the Aged," a critical account of the Townsend pension plan. Loe is survived by three daughters and three grandchil dren. B?ee Silver Dollars FOR YOUR STAMPS! 'Y' Jiffy Car Wash Electric Shaver Service Bailey's Richfield Medford Muffler Co. The ordinance amends connec tion charges. Pre - qualification statements from E and W Con struction company, Everett M. Den Herder, Phoenix-Matthews, Inc., Riverside Construction company, Keith Brothers Con struction company, and Hamil ton and Thorns of Eugene were accepted by the council. Request Granted A reauest from B. N. Ellis for additional driveways at the southeast corner of Crater Lake ave. and Spring st. for a service station was granted. An ordinance authorizing a variance in set back regulations will be considered at the coun cil's next meeting after it voted 4-3 to adopt the ordinance last night. Unless there is a three fourths majority vote in favor of an ordinance when it is first presented, the ordinance is re considered at the next regular meeting. The variance was recommend ed by the planning commission and requested by George Field for a proposed service station at the corner of Crater Lake highway and Delta Waters rd. Quotes From the News BY UNITED PRESS Newport, R.I. President Eisenhower, commenting on his poor golf game at the Newport Country club Thursday: "It takes a little time to get my joints limbered up." Cincinnati Art Fowler, Cincinnati Redlegi pitcher ordered shipped back to the minors: "If I can't make the Reds' pitching staff, then I'd better quit baseball." Las Vegas jayne Mansfield, who after losing a mink stole was promised a full length mink coat by a hotel if the stole is not found: "If I weren't a law-abiding citizen I'd almost wish the police didn't find, the stole." Washington Chairman John McClellan of the Senate Rackets committee, on New York labor racketeer Johnny Dio't fine and two-year prison sentence for labor shakedowns: ' "It is gratifying to know that the law can reach these crooks, convict them and make them serve their sentence." London A Soviet disarmament delegation spokesman, on the East-West disarmament conference that broke up in deadlock Thursday: "The disarmament subcommittee has finished its mandate and ended its work in failure." Consumers Beat Ike To Punch in Appeal For Careful The American consumer has beaten President Eisenhower to the punch in his appeal for dis criminate buying to help combat inflation. That was the opinion of mer chants in all parts of the nation contacted in a United Press sur vey. 1 The President, in a news con ference Tuesday, urged the pub lic to spend more carefully and try to save money as a safeguard against greater inflation. But big city store managers and owners were almost unani mous in their opinion that buy ers already are more cautious in their spending habits. Spend on Recreation They reported only a moder ate increase in sales of luxury items, largely among the so called middle-middle and upper middle classes who are spending more on recreation goods like hi-fi sets and marine equipment. Then, too, some merchants pointed out there's a question of semantics involved what's a luxury item? A spokesman for Kaufmann's department store in Pittsburgh recalled that not too many years ago women regarded an auto matic washer and dryer as a longed-for luxury. Today, many women regard these items as es sentials. At Denver, Joseph Ross, man ager of Daniels & Fisher depart ment store, said he was "not qualified" to determine whether customers were buying luxuries or essentials. 'Confounded' by Statement "A $49 dress is a necessity to one customer, but a luxury to another," he said. For Over A Dependable Place to Buy Safe -Satisfying OIL HEAT QUAKER HEATERS JOHNSON BURNERS STANDARD HEATING OILS Expert Oil Burner Service Valley Fuel Go. 26 West Main Friday, September 6, 1957 Fund Raising Starts For Special Election Cave Junction At the kick off breakfast for the Illinois Val ley Irrigation district fund rais ing drive this week the Illinois Valley Chamber of Commerce through its president, James McDermott, announced a contri bution of $300 toward expenses of a special election. Some five years ago, when former Illinois Valley News publisher Richard Pinkerton was president of the Chamber, he urged that a fund be set aside each year toward the then nebu lous irrigation district. Because of his foresight and the cooper ation of officers who followed, the chamber had nearly $500 saved when an irrigation dis trict vote was proposed for this year. Of this, about $150 was spent in preparing maps for use in canvassing landowners within the boundaries of the district. American railroads in the past 30 years have earned a 6 per cent return in only one year which was in 1942 and in 13 of those years the return has been less than 3 per cent. Spending Ross added he was "confound ed" by the President's state He said the "wheels of American economy" are geared to retail sales. Along a similar vein, A. W. Zelomek, president of the In ternational Statistical Bureau, said in New. "York that a slow down in ' customer spending could create economic trouble. Zelomek blamed much of the current inflation on the in creased costs of services, like medical care and travel, rather than on indiscriminate buying. University Students Must Register Cars Eugene All student cars must be registered this fall with the office of student affairs at the University ' of Oregon. Stu dents wishing to use university owned parking lots must pur chase $5 permits. The new rules are part of a set of regulations on campus parking adopted by the univer sity as the result of a study made by the campus planning commission. Other pertinent parts of the regulations include the fact that all cars parking in university lots must be registered. Certain lots will be reserved for faculty and staff use only, but cars parked in these areas must have registration stickers. All student-owned cars must have registration stickers, to be given the students at time of enrollment in the university. 25 Years Phone SP 3-1576 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEN Nothing New Found to Create Interest in Wall Street Market By ELMER C. WALZER United Press Financial Editor New York (IP) Said the bull to the bear: "Find one thing in all Wall Street that's new against this market." Said the bear to the bull: "Find one thing in all Wall Street to gen erate real enthusi asm for this market." Elmer Walzer There you have the gist of the argument going on in the financial dis trict. Look at the adverse items tight money, profit pinch, cut backs in defense spending, de clines in metal prices, new Com munist threats again in the Mid dle East, and a high plateau for industry. Those things have been around so long everyone knows them by heart. Now what's on the favorable side of the market no specu lation, accounts well margined with the market practically on a cash basis, real investors hold ing stocks, rising steel opera tions, outlook for a big year for autos, outlook for more housing In Varied Sizes Beautiful filet-crochet scarf that will enhance any room. It is crochet that will win prizes, any many compliments, too. Pattern 7268: directions and chart for filet-crochet scarf in three sizes: 36, 45, 53 inches. It will be an heirloom piece. Send Thirty-five cents (coins) for this pattern add 5 cents for each pattern for lst-class mail ing. Send to Medford Mail Trib une, Household Arts Dept., P. O. Box 168, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, ZONE, PAT TERN NUMBER. A bonus for our readers: two FREE patterns, printed ino ,ur new Alice Brooks Needlecraft Eook for 1957! Plus a variety of designs to order crochet, knit ting, embroidery, huck weaving, toys, dolls, others. Send' 25 cents for your copy of this needlecraft book now! ii i iw r f3i PORTABLE! Any Make Portable Typewriters NOTHING DOWN $1.00 A WEEK At.. 31 North Bartlett fflETT starts with adjustments made on payments, and a high rate of consumer spending. Nothing new here either. The market needs stimulating news on either the bearish or the bullish side to generate activity. Some of the market experts think it may fluctuate in a range of 75 points or so between 525 and 450 in the industrial average for a long time. Edmund W. Tabell, analyst for Walston & Co., thinks this range will hold for a year or more. He says it is possible there may be penetrations of this area on either or both sides. Eventually, Tabell looks for an upside penetration. But he doesn't look for anything more than a small penetration in eith er direction until well into 1958 or possibly 1959. But, like other market ex perts, Tabell believes there will be action in individual groups and stocks. He suggests adding well entrenched issues on weakness. There could be a new leader ship in the market, Tabell notes. This might come, he says, in such groups as food chains, re tail stores, drugs, cans, baking. finance, farm machinery, ce ment, blass, and automobiles.. These, he said, may take over temporarily from the capital goods issues. Illinois Valley High Offering Latin Class Cave Junction A course in Latin, the first foreign language ever offered at the Illinois Val ley High school, was started thia week with Mrs. Eulah Shawhah as instructor. Mrs. Shawhan, who came to the Josephine county school sys tem from southern California, taught Latin at Long Beach High school last year. She will have four classes in English, pne in Latin. The decision to add a foreign language to the curriculum was made because of a drop in en rollment, and because a quali fied teacher was available. Olympia (IP) About 120 delegates from the United States and Hawaii are expected to at tend the 35th annual meeting of the Association of State Fore sters Sept. 11-13 at Longview, Wash. MONEY At Crater Finance you may borrow for any worthwhile purpose on your FURNITURE - AUTO . SALARY and repay In monthly Install ments.! You may choose the terms most suitable to you up to 24 months. Leant may be paid In ad vance or in full at any time. Crater Finance CORPORATION 135 Pine St. - Central Point Phone NO 4-1273 Frank Wilkinson, Mgr. Convenient Parking r9 j.A;RftlS!5ff WITH A NEW ... Typewriter Stand With The Purchase) of PORTABLE TYPEWRITER OFFICE SUPPLY Phone SP 3-3133 SCHOOL m