Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 23, 1958, Image 21

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    Elaine Soule
Thursday, January 23, 1938
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEN
r, XT
Sanity Trial
Scheduled Today
S 7?
CROPS BEING 'SPECIALED' Last year's bumper crop-of
America's iavorite foods went into cans and are now being
'8pecialed." Shown is a satisfying casserole using plentiful
tuna, a medley of plentiful canned corn and peas, an aspara
gus salad and tart red cherry muffins.
Feeding the Family
By ZOLA VINCENT
Food Editor
Bmart Shoppers Take
: Adrantage of Sales
J- "We never write a story on
"-canned foods but that we are
jreminded of the classic story
of the Englishman who came
;.lo our part of the country
i hiany years ago, surveyed our
-vast acreage of orchards and
truck farming and asked how
' In the world we could eat it
all. The reply was,. "Well,
. we eat all we can and what
r we can't eat, we can."
Today we not only "can'
v; but we also freeze tremendous
quantities of fresh fruits,
"vegetables, fish and shellfish
Now is the season of canned
foods sales; a time of clearing
out warehouse stocks of last
year's canned crops of sea
sonal products ... to make
room for this year's harvests
which will begin again in the
ipring.
Watch this newspaper's
market advertisements. Note
canned foods specials as you
wheel your shopping cart up
and down those aisles. Buy
the dozen, buy the case of
those products favored by the
family. Save money. Enjoy
convenience of having variety
of canned foods handy for
quick meal planning, family
enjoyment.
Canned Food Leaders
Market shelves and displays
-re stacked high with canned
- peas, corn, tomato products,
. peaches, tart red cherries,
" -pineapple, pears, tuna and
sardines. Juices, especially the
r .large sizes, are bargains. See
today's market report for
; more complete list of good
canned food buys.
: Heat and Eat Peat
Seventy per cent of all the
wpeas grown go Into cans. Ore-
-gon and Washington are major
-Tsrowine areas. We'll venture
: the opinion that more than 90
rer cent of canned Deas are
iimply seasoned, ready to heat
and eat, so we'll suggest new
seasonings.
- Herbs and other flavorings
- designed to add flavor distinc
. tion to canned peas include
: ,hasil. chili nowder. cinnamon.
'. .'marjoram, mushrooms, olive
. oil. oregano, savory, tarragon,
; thyme. Use of onion salt or
,-cooking a small onion with
;the peas adds to an already
r.veood flavor.
7T Many favor the addition of
r."rsh or dried mint leaves
- "Canned peas often are com-
Jjined with diced carrots, with
-whole kernel corn, diced pi-
Tnlenta or cnoppea musn
ZZxooms. Thev're also good creamed:
In vegetable salads; in soups
and stew and in combinauon
Twith many vegetables in other
: dishes.
: Take a Can of Corn
It may surprise some to
riearn that our western states
grow 14 per cent of the coun
iljry's corn; that 55 per eent of
the crop goes into cans.
Open a can of corn, yellow
or white, whole kernel or
: cream style. In five minutes
r .you can heat it, season it and
i 'aerve it. Flavor interest may
--"be found in a bit of cinnamon
"-'or nutmeg, in chili powder,
; chili sauce, paprika, celery
-salt, parsley or onion salt.
Corn Combos
Corn combines well with
peas, lima beans, tomatoes,
bits of red andgreen pepper.
Add canned corn to muffins,
Bymptomt of Distress Arising frorr
STOMACH ULCERS
pucto EXCESS ACID
QUICK RELIEF OR NO COST
Over five million package of th
EVILLARD TREA TMENT have been sold
ir relief of tymptom of distress arising from
tomach and Duodenal Ulcars due to Ex-
Add Poor Digestion, Sour or Up!
ttomach, Gasalnesa. Heartburn, Sleep
Lamo, etc., due to Exeats Acid. Ask foe
"WHIard's Message" which fully explains
Urn home treatment free at
CASH DAVIS PHARMACY
CENTRAL DRUG
WAINSCOTT'S PHARMACY
WESTERN THRIFT STORE ,
Phoenix:
CIER'S DRUG STORE ,
waffles, griddle cakes. Make
a main dish by combining
corn with meat, fish or eggs
in a corn omelet, corn and
ham casserole, chipped beef
and corn, corn ring with
creamed seafoods, corn and
beef balls, corn fritters, corn
pudding or make a sturdy
corn chowder.
Be a Label Reader
There's much to be learned
and money to be saved by
reading labels on canned
foods. The label takes the
guesswork out of buying. All
labels state the quantity of
food in the can; many indicate
number of average servings.
The style of pack is given so
you can choose the one that
best serves your purpose. Use
fancy pack for "show";
"choice" or "standard" for
ingredient use.
On Tomato Products
Our tomato crop runs into
millions of tons and 1957 was
a big crop year with Calif
ornia producing 39 per cent
of the nations canner 'crop
Seventy six per cent of toma
toes grown up go into cans
as whole or pureed tomatoes,
tomato juice, tomato sauce,
tomato paste, tomato soup.
Use any tomato product to
add flavor and color-richness
to meat loaf, meat balls, egg
dishes, cheese dishes, spa
ghetti sauce, rice dishes, grav
ies, stews, soups, fish and veg
etable dishes.
Tomato Seasonings
Second only to onions as a
seasoning, tomatoes combine
with practically any thing ed
ible excepting fruit. Tremen
dously popular as they come
from the can, heated and sea
soned, they balance many a
menu. To the salt, pepper and
butter, add any of the follow
ing items for flavor interest:
allspice, basil, bay leaf, bor
age, cayenne, chili powder,
cloves, curry powder, dill
seed, garlic, lemon, mace, mar
joram, olive oil, onion, ore
gano, sage, savory, tarragon,
thyme. i '
Tomato Juice Seasoning
Almost everyone "doctors
up" tomato juice; adds lemon
juice and or Worcestershire
sauce. We suggest other varia
tions: basil, bay leaf, celery
salt, curry powder, flavor
salt, garlic salt, mace, marjor
am, omon, oregano, rosemary,
tarragon, thyme.
Sauced Beets
Here's a surprise. Seventy
per cent of the beets grown
go into cans; 25 per cent are
cooked fresh. They're can
ned sliced, whole, cut and
quartered, diced and trench
ed. Washington and Oregon
grow 15 per cent of the can-
ners pack.
Heat and season with salt,
pepper and butter. For va
riety, try bay leaf, caraway
seed, cloves, dill seed, lemon,
mustard, pickling spice, tar
ragon or vinegar. Or serve
them like this:
Drain one No. 303 can slic
ed or diced beets, saving liq
uid. Combine 114 cups orange
juice and one-half cup seed
less raisins and heat to boil
ing. Mix three-fourths tea
spoon salt, one-fourth cup of
sugar and two tablespoons
cornstarch. Add beet liquid
and stir to a smooth paste.
Add orange juice and raisin
mixture. Cook, stirring con
stantly, until thick and clear.
Add one tablespoon lemon
juice, two tablespoons butter
and drained beets; heat. Six
servings.
Tuna Supper Casserole
Uses Popular Seafood
The salmon catch may have
slightly more poundage, but
more tuna (99 per cent of the
catch) goes into cans putting
tuna considerably in the lead
as a canned seafood product.
With 83 per cent of the pack
caught and canned by Calif
ornians, the remaining 11 per
cent is caught and canned by
Washington, Oregon and Hawaii.
Fifty one per cent of the
Redwood City, Calf.-
Elaine Soule, 20-year-old typ
ist from Freeport, N.Y., went
on trial today on her plea
that she was insane at the
time she killed her roommate,
Miss, Soule appeared before
the same jury of seven men
and five women who on Tues
day found her guilty of sec
ond degree murder for bludg
eoning and stabbing to death
Catherine Marie Elvins, 19
The slaying took place in
the Burlingame apartment
two girls shared last July 24.
Miss Elvins was the daughter
of a prominent Seattle, Wash.,
physician.
Realizes Break
"I realize I got a break,"
Miss Soule said of the verdict.
"Wherever they send me, I'll
try to make the best of it.1
Miss Soule sobbed bitterly
for an hour or two after she
heard the verdict. But Wed
nesday, she had regained the
icy composure that has mark
ed her behavior ever since
she was arrested.
If a jury finds she was sane,
Miss Soule faces a five-year-to-life
sentence. If insane she
will go to a mental institution.
District Attorney Keith
Sorenson said he would rest
his case immediately on the
presumption of sanity.
Defense attorneys G. Brooks
Ice and John A. Cost said
they would call Dr. Walter
A. Rapaport, superintendent
and medical director at Ag-
news State hospital.
Doesn't Understand
Superior Judge Frank Blum
said he would call three court
appointed psychiatrists.
Mrs. Frieda Soule, Elaine's
mother, said Elaine "still
doesn't completely understand
what is going to happen to
her."
"She still doesn't realize
what has happened to her,"
she said with a sad smile.
"I told her it was up to her
to make the time go fast. She
mustn't be unhappy. She must
try to be satisfied with this.
It could have been worse. She
has her life and can build,
build, build.
"We the family, are with
her, beside her, all around
her. She must feel that."
- tt JJi4ffl?
WORKING AS UNIT, 42 doctors and technicians, with aid
of artificial heart successfully complete five-hour opera
tion, during which machine took place of Johanne Lazor
back's heart for nine minutes. Dr. John Y. Templeton III,
attending surgeon, checks normal heartbeat of Johanne, 8,
after operation in Philadelphia hospital. (International)
Home May Be
Symbol of Social
Status in Few Years
By ELMER C.WALZER
United Press Financial Editor
New York (IP) In time
the home rather than the au
tomobile may become the ac
cepted sym
bol of social
status, ac
cording to
Walter May
nard, partner
in Shearson,
Ham mill &
M a y n a r d
made that re
mark in his
outlook for
the market in
1958, indicating two import
ant complementary trends in
our economy in affecting im-
Elmer Walzer
business and
'Gibraltar of Asia1
Fortress for Nationals
Matsu (IP) This rocky
pinpoint of an island off the
coast of Red China is a sort
of Gibralter of Asia.
Generalissimo Chiang Kai
Shek has more than 18,000
of his crack Nationalist Chin
ese troops dug in here and
armed to the teeth. They
have vowed never to sur
render. Facing Matsu from the op
posite shores only 10 miles
away are several hundred
Red gun positions and" more
than 100,000 Communist
Chinese soldiers.
The Nationalists have 155
pack is packed in chunks, 34
per cent is solid pack and the
remaining 15 per cent gets
flaked or grated.
We used two cans of bargain-priced
tuna and eight
ounces of egg noodles in this
recipe for six generous serv
ings. Cook egg noodles according
to package directions. Mean
while, combine one large can
undiluted evaporated milk,
one-half teaspoon salt, lVfc
teaspoons dry mustard and
one tablespoon steak sauce in
saucepan over low heat to
just below boiling. Add two
cups grated American cheese;
stir over low heat until the
cheese melts. Add two cans
chunk-style tuna, one-half
teaspoon oregano and cooked
noodles; mix well. Turn into
greased 2Vz quart casserole.
Sprinkle with Parmesan
cheese. Bake in moderate ov
en, 350 degrees, 30 minutes.
Sauerkraut Favored
For Winter Ealing
There's an abundance of
tangy, zestful sauerkraut for
steaming with frankfruters,
pork spare ribs and for bak
ing with pork chops as well
as for eating as a vegetable,
either hot or cold.
Evidence exists that the
builders of China's Great Wall
ate sauerkraut regularly as a
healthful staple. Obviously en
joyed for centuries, fifteen
per cent of today's cabbage
crop is canned in brine.
Sauerkraut with Apples.
Ideal with any pork dish, we
combine plentiful sauerkraut
and plentiful apples. Peal and
core three tart cooking apples
and cut into eighths. In a 2V2
quart saucepan, alternate ap
ples and layers of sauerkraut
from a No. 2V can. Add wa
ter barely to cover, if neces
sary; bring to boiling point;
reduce heat, cover and sim
mer until apples are tender
(20 to 25 minutes. Add three
tablespoons butter and four
tablespoons sugar; cook rapid-1
ly until almost all liquid has
evaporated. Six servings. 1
mm "Big Rom" howitzers, 90
mm and 75 mm American
supplied artillery that often
exchanges fire with the Reds.
There are underground
cement fortifications and
tunnels morer than 20 feet
deep.
The entire 6V4 - square -mile
island is a maze of mine
fields, trenches, gun emplace
ment, barbed wire and pill
boxes. The few beaches where a
landing might be made are
covered with scullies heavy
cement blocks embedded with
pointed criss-crossed iron
rails to halt tanks.
Yet with all this, the value
of bristling little Matsu to
Chiang today is political
not military.
Northern Anchor
Loss of Matsu would not
mean the loss of Formosa,
which is 125 miles away. Mil
itary experts agree on this.
American strategists doubt
the value of Matsu as a step
ping stone for any National
ist counterattack of the
China mainland.
Matsu and four other small
er islands around it are the
northern anchor chain of the
Nationalist-held offshore is
lands. Quemoy, which is much
larger, is 150 miles south.
As heavily dug in as they
are, Nationalist defenses on
Matsu today are Korean war
style. The island is not large
enough to allow any defense
maneuvering or even depth
for its artillery.
Several days of bombing
would take a heavy toll de
spite the underground shelt
ers. Chiang's troops and the
more than 10,000 civilian is
landers are completely de
pendent upon Formosa. A
cut in this supply line would
cripple Matsu, possibly with
in four weeks.
Why then do the National
ists place so much emphasis
on this tiny island?
Loss of Matsu would be a
tremendous psychologi
cal blow to the Chinese on
Formosa. It could touch off
panic, invasion fear, internal
inflation so severe that it
would be almost as bad as a
direct military blow against
Formosa.
Propaganda Value
The Nationalist govern
ment knows this and has done
its best to make U. S. offic
ials aware of it.
If Matsu is attacked, each
day that it resists will be of
major propaganda value to
the Nationalists. A few criti
cal days of survival might be
enough to mobilize American
officials and public opinion
portant groups in the stock
market in the next several
years.
"On one hand," he said, "a
growing regard for utility,
and a diminished enthusiasm
for longer-and-lower, chrome
hung, glass bubbles seems to
summarize a plainly visible
automobile trend, and. on the
other hand, Americans now
to be in a mood to lavish in
creasing affection on their
homes.
"We've often contemplated
with a smile the snectacle of
a hovel with a Cadillac park
ed beside it. A more typical
picture in the 60s may be a
well-landscaDed suburban
jewel with two Volkswagens
in tne garage."
Rate Inadequate
Maynard says the present
rate of construction of a mil
lion home units a year seems
clearly inadeauate to surmort
the multiple demands from
obsolescence, fire, population
mobility, deliberate destruc
tion as the result of highway
relocation and slum clear
ance, and new family forma
tion which in the next sev
eral years will begin to accel
erate rapidly.
He believes Congress will
act energetically on housing
and says credit easing should
have a stimulating effect.
Companies which sell mater
ials used in dwelling con
struction seem to face the
prospect of a steadily expand
ing market for many years
to come, he says.
May Drag Longer
Maynard believes the re
cession may not reach its low
before the third quarter and
may drag on even lonser. The
market will be mixed with
some areas aided by credit
easing1 and others still ex
posed to the profit-squeeze.
He finds three elements of
weaknesses in our economy:
1. Increase in debt at every
level of economy; 2. Econom
ic and political ascendancy of
organized labor, and 3. The
highly progressive income
tax structure of t h e nation.
On the favorable side, he
lists a stable government, ac
celerated rate of invention,
high ratexof saving, popula
tion growth and our increas
ing international responsibil
ities.
He believes we will rise to
the new Russian challenge,
and he concludes that despite
the fact the recession seems
painfully long drawn out,
"we should not forget that
the foundations for future in
vestment success are laid in
times like these."
into U. S. action against Red
China.
And, any U. S. intervention
would be bound to benefit
Nationalist China.
The United States is not
specifically committed to de
fend Matsu and Quemoy, as
it is Formosa and the Pesca
dores Islands. But U. S. offic
ers have helped plan the de
fense of the islands, and there
is a handful of American mil
itary advisers regularly as
signed here.
If the U. S. does jump in
to save Matsu as National
ists officials are counting on
it to do it will be purely
for political reasons and not
because of any military value
of the islands.
There is no mistake that
Matsu is a thorn in the side
of Red China. The National
ists delight in this and will
continue to build up Matsu
militarily and continue to
taunt the Reds with it. -
WE GUARANTEE
Every Item in
Our Store!
If you ire not completely satis
fied with any item purchased
here, bring it back and your
money will be cheerfully refunded.
BETTY CROCKER
mi& mm
White-Yellow-Devik Food-Black Walnut
4 for
00
CAMPBELL'S
SOUPS
Tomato 3.0-
Cream of Chicken Cream of Mushroom
6 for If 00
lit
Prter Fri
Cre'm Style Corn h
KOUNTY KIST
U FOR
Pk-l5100
llHSlSial) Pk9 R I
AA Large EGS
5v rsii&c
Ell t I H V 1 1 II
U MIZi GOZ. V
p. LARGE -SOLID
gjpCABBACE ,WC
t TEXAS RED SUNKIST
GRAPEFRUIT J0C ns
Here's a Real Buy On 1) ( (J j C
Potatoes 10.39 1' 1
:
jf-gjrt LARGE HEADS SNOW WHITE
QBr - Cauliflower
PORK SHOULDER
Roast
STRAUSS CHOICE GUARANTEED MEATS
FOR ECONOMICAL
PORK IBOIYS
PICNIC STYLE
And Buying Trimmed Cuts
You Can't Afford to Pass These Byl
Pork OVER
YOUNG
EASTERN
PORKERS
Pork Sausage
S
PORK
Steal
Lean Center Butt Cuts
17
lb I 1
cjjOO
Del Monte Sweetheart Brand Those Who Have Eaten It . . . LIKE IT1
"First of the Season" Fresh Smelt! Also Other Varieties!
THI
. . . PAULSEN'S . . .
ft
tU Ml MM
CENTRAL POINT, OREGON
Prices Good Fri. & Sat. We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities
11
Lots of Free
Parking
2 Big Lots
AT THE REAR OF
THE STORE!
it