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Feeding the Family
By ZOLA VINCENT
Food Editor
Marvellous Mushrooms
Fresh mushrooms, though avail
able the year around, are at their
very best right now. Mushrooms
grow in many places but major
western stations are at Los An
geles, San Francisco, Salem, Ore.
and Olympia, Wash. Mushrooms,
mayel of the plant world, give
zesnd flavor to gravies, sauces,
soup's and many other dishes.
Butphow about trying them as
a vegetable?
Saute Mushrooms. Slice one
pound fresh mushrooms through
caps and stems. Melt one-fourth
cup butter or margarine in skil
let; add mushrooms. Sprinkle
lightly with salt; saute over low
heaf, stirring gently often, till
mushrooms are lightly browned
in their own juice; takes five to
eight minutes. Figure on a pound
for each four servings. We like
to add a dash of Worcestershire.
Italian Style. For each six
servings,' cut W'z pounds fresh
mushrooms in thick dices. Leave
the small ones whole. Cook, cov
ered for only three minutes in
one-fourth cup water to which
two tablespoons lemon juice has
been added. Salt and pepper to
taste. Drain and dry. Coat mush
rooms lightly with flour. Lightly
beat two, eggs with two table
spoons of water added. Coat in
egg mixture then in fine bread
crumbs. Separate pieces and let
dry 15 minutes. Drop mushrooms
into deep hot fat and fry till
brown. Drain on absorbent pa-
ncr. Serve with lemon wedges
w poached Pears. Peel, halve and
.eoPf fresh pears. In each half,
rplic two orange sections with
oaJi membrane removed. Dot with
(bfown sugar and a bit of butter.
IBaJte in covered casserole 25 to
(3g minutes. Six servings. Es-
Cpcifuly delicious with broiled
(c$i lices.
!Iiiuil Ham Loaves
(Tie family Stand-By
iucky the family who has this
iam loaf standing by ready for
fine eating in the middle of a
busy day or at the end of a busy
day. Make these thriftily from
uncooked or tender-type shank
or butt end of ham and serve
with seasonal green vegetables
and a Waldorf salad.
Have meat man finely grind
one pound ham and one-fourth
pound of lean pork. Combine one
beaten egg and one-half cup milk;
add one-fourth cup crushed cer
eal such as cornflakes or rtce
flakes. Combine mixture with
ground meat; add one tablespoon
brown sugar, one-half teaspoon
ground cloves, one-half teaspoon
mtistard. Shape into four loaves
and bake in shallow open pan
at 325 degrees for 45 .minutes.
Four generous servings.
Spiced Yams
The yams what am. "Yam,"
we are told, is a nickname that
became sort of a trademark for
the moist-fleshed, golden sweet
potatoes that now grow plenti
fully in our part of the country.
Whether you buy them fresh or
canned, here's a recipe that
makes mighty good eating.
IV2 cups mashed yams
1 teaspoon lemon juice
2 tablespoons brown sugar
14 teaspoon powdered cloves
6 cling peach halves
1 tablespoon butter or margar
ine Mix yams, lemon juice, sugar,
spice and whip until fluffy.
Drain canned peach halves. Ar
range them in buttered baking
dish and pile high with sweet
potato. Dot with butter. Bake 20
minutes in a moderate, 400 de
gree, oven. Serve hot. Six serv
ings. Holiday Cole Slav
Simply superb with any main
meal. Minced green pepper and
cranberry sauce make it season
ally festive. Toss at the table if
you like.
Combine one quart finely
shredded cabbage, two table
spoons minced green pepper,
one-half teaspoon salt, one-eighth
teaspoon paprika, one cup may
onnaise or cooked salad dress
ing. Chill and just before serv
ing, add one-half of a one-pound
can of jellied cranberry sauce
cut into cubes. Toss lightly with
two forks.
Salmon Casserole
Shoppers' Mainstay
A thrifty, easy-to-make and a
joy-to-have-ready is this west
coast specialty done with a can
of salmon, a can of cream of
celery soup, some macaroni and
sprinkled with cheese.
Cook four ounces elbow maca
roni in boiling salted water until
tender, about eight minutes.
Drain and rinse. While macaroni
is cooking, melt two tablespoons
butter in saucepan. Add one
fourth cup chopped onion and
brown lightly. Stir in two table
spoons flour, salt and pepper to
taste. Add three - fourths cup
milk and cook until thickened,
stirring constantly. Add one can
condensed cream of celery soup,
a dash of tabasco and stir until
well blended. Fold in cooked
macaroni an one can flaked sal
mon. Pour into IV2 quart casser
ole. Sprinkle with one-half cup
nippy cheese. Bake in moderate
oven, 350 degrees, about 25
minutes. Four generous servings.
Grocery Suggestions
For Family Sharing
There's simply no one any
where who wouldn't be delight
ed with a thoughtful gift of plain
or fancy groceries. They are es
pecially ideal as a family gift
since all can share in the plea
sure of eating.
West Coast cheeeses. Different
and most welcome would be any
one or an assortment of our
famed western cheeses; Langlois,
Wafer Drawn From
Coos Sand Dunes
Coos Bay OF) Pacific
Power & Light Company an
nounced Thursday that it is
drawing initial flows of 1,500,
000 gallons of water per day
from sand dune wells in the
Coos Bay area.
The wells are part of a pilot
station built on the sand dunes
north of Coos Bay to develop
an underground supply of water
for industrial expansion.
A. J. Moore, Coos Bay district
manager for the utility, said the
test pumping will continue for
several months while engineers
test the ability of the wells to
deliver a sustained flow.
The installation is the only
one of its kind in North America
to extract fresh water from sand
dunes near the ocean.
Blue, Brick, Brie, Camembert,
Casseri, Cheta, Monterey Jack,
Ricotta, Romano to name but a
few available in our cheese
shops.
Who wouldn't welcome a fresh,
frozen or smoked turkey or a
duck, a whole canned ham. Look
at all those fancy fish and shell
fish items, both domestic and im
ported over in the facy canned
foods section.
Pickles, relishes, fancy sauces,
jams, marmalades and jellies.
Make up an assortment.
Baked Specialties. Fancy
crackers, cookies, breads, fruit
cakes, plum puddings, pastries,
pies from the local bakeshop. A
coffee cake for breakfast feast
ing. Put the freshly baked items
on your list now, buy them later
of course.
Nuts make good gifts. Wal
nuts, almonds, filberts from near
by groves; bags or fancy bowls
of them. In the shell, shelled,
salted or sugared.
Herbs and spices, fresh and
zestful. Fruits, fresh, dried and
processed. Honey is a sweet idea!
How about a collection of salad
dressings? A package of unusual
tea? Now that we've started you
thinking along these lines, you'll
have lots of good ideas.
Quick Look at Market
Meat. Fresh pork is reaching
seasonal peak; is tender, juicy
and freer of excess fat than it
has ever been. There's less beef,
veal and lamb than usual at this
time of year so prices will con
tinue to seem a bit high. Poultry
continues to highlight best meat
buys.
Abundant fish and shellfish
are crabs, fish sticks, halibut,
oysters, rockfish, salmon.
Vegetable plentifuls include
celery, lettuce, squash, yams,
broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cab
bage and cauliflower and the
good old staples, potatoes and
onions.
Fruit displays offer apples,
grapefruit, Cornice pears, per
simmons, grapes and avocados.
Cl
TO THE 5 OUT OF 10 HOUSEWIVES
WHO HOW PRE-SCRUB
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New 1958
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with tht amazing
Magic Minute
THE AUTOMATIC
PRE-SCRUBBING PERIOD
THAT'S IMPOSSIBLE IN
ANY OTHER WASHER!
O second! of automatic pra-Mrubblng '
la double-rich suds to cut great and grime)
for m fagular washing begins.
3
W Minute
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FULLY AUTOMATIC Jj
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Only IT Wide, Install Flush to Wall
come see models with
iillllllllilli
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2 SPEZD VASNIIIG UUT FILTER SUDS BACK
REGULAR FACRIC CYCLE AND FIIIE FABRIC CYCLE
3 WASH WATER TEMPERATURES v 2 RINSE WATER TEMPERATURES
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Our Good Service Dept.
Is at Your Service for the Years Ahead
Truth Sacrificed for
Political Advantage,
Stevenson Declares
London W Adlai E. Ste
venson told Britons today the
Eisenhower administration has
"sacrificed truth" and "the re
spect and confidence of our
friends abroad" for political ad
vantage. Stevenson made the statement
in a special article written for
the London News-Chronicle in
his role as titular head of the
Democratic party. The piece was
an explanation of his decision
not to accept President Eisen
hower's invitation to attend the
top level Paris NATO sessions
later this month.
Stevenson said he would "go
before Congress" to call for an
"open handed" billion dollar
foreign aid program. He did not
say when.
Unhappy About Mid-East
He wrote that he saw unhappy
developments in the Middle East
and within the NATO alliance
that indicated this was a perilous
period for the West.
The Anglo-French attack on
Suez would not have taken place
last year had the United States
taken a more decisive position
toward Russian Middle East
penetration and nationalization
of the Suez Canal by Egypt, he
said.
Made No Specifications
Stevenson did not specify
what position he thought the
United States should have taken
in these connections.
Stevenson stressed the need
for truth to be presented to the
people of the United States by
the administration and wrote:
"I think there have been
many occasions in the past four
years under the Eisenhower ad
ministration when we have
sacrificed truth, and we have
sacrificed, indeed, event the re
spect and confidence of our
friends abroad, in the interests
of party harmony of some fancy
political advantage in this coun
try (the U.S.) and I think this is
a great mistake."
In Washington, a spokesman
for Stevenson denied the News
Chronicle tory. "This story is
definitely not true," the spokes
man said in a statement. "Mr.
Stevenson has not written any
article for the London News
Chronicle, nor has he talked to
any of their reporters. The
Chronicle may have taken a
speech or article by Mr. Steven
son months ago and has given
the impression that it was writ
ten within the past few days."
Governor Favors
Grain Export Program
Pendleton Oft Gov. Rob
ert D. Holmes told the Oregon
Wheat "Growers League Thurs
day it is important that this
country's grain export program
under public law 480 be con
tinued. Holmes said that under pri
vate treaty arrangements "we
could supply our Asiatic neigh
bors with only 18 per cent of
their grain needs. Under public
AW. CUT IT OUTI
Savoy, 111. (IP) The fire de
partment here is doing a slow
burn ever since it was assigned
a telephone number formerly
held by a meat market. Village
trustee Willard Koss said house
wives who only want to order
a pound of pork chops touch off
the fire department's alarm horn,
and cause telephones to ring in
the homes of two volunteer fire
men, a gasoline station, the fire
station, and a fertilizer agency.
Friday, December 6, 1957
MEDFORD (OREGOW) TRIlUir ' TRljV
Canadian Sentenced
On Postal Forgeries
Portland "(W Clifford Du
hamel, 34-year-old Canadian,
was sentenced here Thursday to
seven years in prison for forging
money orders stolen from the
post office at St. Paul, Ore.
His wife, Erma, 27, who also
pleaded guilty to a joint 14
count indictment, was given a
five-year sentence to be su
pended on condition that she re
turn to Canada and does not
come back to this country with
out permission.
The home of the Duhamels
and their three children is in
Vancouver, B.C.
In a plea to U.S. Judge Gus
Solomon for probation for the
two, their court-appointed at
torney, William F. Thomas, said
that after their arrest the Du
hamels cooperated with postal
inspectors and all of the some
500 money order blanks taken in
the burglary were recovered.
The Duhamels were charged
with- forging 14 of the blanks,'
each for $78.38.
JUST ROUTINE1
Toledo, Ohio (IP) The state
highway patrol's Sylvania post
here delivered a child for Mrs.
Bernard N a s b a u m Thursday
when she and her husband saw
they wouldn't make it to a hos
pital and' drove into the patrol
parking lot. The patrol dispatch
er and two patrolmen are be
coming experienced midwives.
It was their second delivery in
a week.
ARTS MIlTItTER SIKsf
Pretoria, South Af ricf, M
Johannes Hendrikus Viljoen, 8,
South Africa's minister of edu
cation, arts, science and health,
died here Thursday after a long
illness. Viljoen, a supporter of
racial segregation, became a
member of parliament in 1933.
He opposed the entry of South
Africa into World War H and
quit the Nationalist Party over
the issue. O
law 480 we supply them 60 per
cent of those needs," he said.
Holmes pledged ' state-level
support of moves to increase
land resource benefits.
About 500 delegates were ex
pected for today's general session.
Gives Added Life to All Fabrics.
We Rerex All of Our Dry
Cleaning at No Extra Charge
Medford Gleaners
Hale & Kathryn Wheeler
34 No. Holly, SP 2-6500
Free Pickup and Deilvery
(SI 1 1 M mmm
lll $31.95
tl Sit - V.X Termi j
$31.95 r
Termi
Four-speed portable In
washable charcoal and
light grey (or sky blue
and white). Famous
Columbia sound system
includes Ronette car
tridge, aluminum feather-touch
tone arm,
vented sound chamber,
front speaker.
His and Hers
4
listen .. . the greatest sound, engintered by the greatest
name in sound Columbia ! Look the superb new styl
ing of the 1957 Columbia phonographs. Stop . . . Look . . .
and Listen to the exciting, new Columbia line next time
you're in our neighborhood.
JOHNSTON STORES
112 South Riverside
fnl?fffl
77
o) air
TSEfulOir
ye? b priced lower than in i?
Here's great news! While prices of 1958 cars of other
manufacturers are up, the price of Ford's exciting new
Custom 300 Series is down. In fact, a brand-new 58
Ford Custom 300 with all of its exciting new styling
and engineering advances is priced lower than a '57
model, similarly equipped! But there is much more
than low price to Ford's value story.
World approved styling. A Custom 300 brings you
styling that is dramatically new. With its Honey
combed grille, Slipstream roof, Deep-Sculptured rear
deck, Power-Flow hood and Safety-Twin headlights
and taillights, Ford styling drew admiring glances all
the way from Paris to Saigon . . . yet it's yours now in
any Custom 300 without extra cost!
New riding comfort. Notice, too, the solid comfort of
your softer, smoother ride. That's Ford's easier acting
front and rear suspensions. They soak up the bumps
before they reach you. And you'll ride in luxury with
Ford's beautiful new deep-dimension interiors!
Thrifty, new engines. You have a wonderful choice
of new power plants, designed for real gas-saving
economy plus greater performance. Six or V-8, they
give you more power, smoother power, from less gas!
Priced as much as $50 lower. A comparison of man
ufacturer's suggested retail delivered prices shows
that a 58 Ford Custom 300 is priced as much as $50
less than the same model for '57! You'll wonder how
Ford can offer so many of the things you want) in a
car priced so low. One big reason: Ford gives you
more car for less money because Ford sells morel
See and drive a Custom 300 and youll agree that
these Fords give you more value for your car-buying
dollars than any car on the American road today.
CUSTOM
30
ri Jt&t I ew handling ease. Slide behind the wheel of a
Tjt wi'f il tS Custom 300 and discover just how much fun driving
l-TfT" J can be. Notice how smoothly it handles. That's Ford's
rjHr'" flfil new feather-touch Magic-Circle steering, the next
OjT- WjpLiir best thing to power steering.
J(K ' 68FCRD
jj o
O
G
fc
G O
O
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CMTER LAKE MOTORS, OSX
Main and Fir Medford
JolHlNSTON
112 SOUTH RIVERSIDE
G