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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 30, 1958)
2A MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Tnurid'sy, October 30, 1938 Feeding the Family By ZOLA VINCENT Food 'Macaroni, Honey Producer Celebrate National Week National Macaroni Week and National Honey Week are scheduled for the last week -of October. Purpose of these '"special" weeks is to call at tention to the bountiful sup plies and varieties of both of ."these long-time favored prod-:-ucts. The macaroni trio, spaghet ti, noodles and, of course, macaroni, gives us an infinite :;variety of shapes and sizes to l add excellent nutrition and I-texture interest to our meals. Because of their bland flavor fnhey combine well with all protein foods, many vege tables and some fruits to "make hearty dinner dishes, simple soups and salads, and ; even desserts. They are es pecially well known for their lalmost magical ability to pro vide gourmet dishes at low j'cost. Honey, pature's original sweetener, is the product of C'an even more important phase ;of our agriculture, the pollini ;"zation of fruits and vegeta bles. Bee keepers furnish bees to ranches for this purpose. I-The West Coast produced over ?30 million pounds of honey 'for processing last year, with j most of it used "as is" for pouring over hot breads, cereals and such, but with more and more of it being used in infant formulas and in cooking. An increasingly popular by-product of all these busy bees is beeswax pressed into beautifully colored sheets for making aromatic, practic ally dripless candles. Mexicali Macaroni Ideal For Inexpensive Parlies Mexicali Macaroni with its intriguing combination of flavors and textures is an ideal main dish for informal dinner gatherings. Buffet sup pers featuring one, two or three main dishes, salads and desserts are an ever-popular COMPLETE GLASS SERVICE Auto Windshield! Furniture Tops Store Fronts Aluminum Sash Plate and Window Glasi Mirror! Thermopane PHONE SP 3-3613 SELBY G&ss 303 North Bartlett If You Don't Know ROY P.WILKES 1 "tf:- jK Those who know will tell you he is the man for Councilman Ward 1. Former College Professor and Research Scientist. Officer in U. S. Navy during World War II. Organized and led successful drive for municipal facilities in Kenwood Grandview area. Appointed by Mayor Snider to City Budget Committee in 1957. Believes wholesome new businesses and industries should be welcome in Medford. ELECT To Represent Ward w Pd. Pol. Adv. Wilkes for Councilman Comm., lwood B. Hedberg, Secy. Editor form of serving large or small groups at casual get-togethers. When money counts (and just when doesn't it?), maca roni products will help the menu towards the desired party feeling while still being kind to slim budgets. This robust macaroni dish is a fine example of such good eating. 2 tablespoons salad oil IV2 pounds ground veal V4 cup chopped celery 1 medium -size green pep per, chopped 1 cup beef bouillon V cup catsup Salt and pepper 1 to 2 teapsoons chili powder 2 cups cooked elbow maca roni IV2 cups canned red kid ney beans 1 cup cooked or canned peas Heat oil; add veal, celery and green pepper. Cook until veal is browned, stirring oc casionally. Add bouillon, cat sup, salt, pepper and chili powder. Cover and cook over low heat 30 minutes, stirring occasionally. Taste and cor rect seasoning with more salt, pepper and chili powder, if desired. Add macaroni, beans and peas to veal mixture; mix well. Heat to serving temp erature over low heat. Serve with Parmesan cheese, if de sired. Lemon-Honey Dresiing A favorite dressing for fruit salads is this delightful com bination of lemon and honey. Mix one - fourth cup honey with one - third cup lemon juice, one-fourth teaspoon salt and one-half celery seed. Mix thoroughly and chill before using. Apple-Walnut Pie Is Honey of a Recipe New season Jonathan ap ples, walnut halves and honey combine in this spicy pie to make a dessert of distinction With honey as the sweetener, we think you'll agree that it is a honey of a recipe. Six generous, rich, satisfying serv ings. 2 cups grated apple (about 6 apples) 2 tablespoons lemon juice 1 tablespoon grated lemon rind A cup honey 1 egg, slightly beaten Ji teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon cinnamon Va teaspoon nutmeg 2 tablespoons flour Ask About Him! ROY P. 1 on the City Council L '"V-jk J MEXICALI MACARONI - A buffet dinner featuring this mouth-watering Mexicali Macaroni is an inexpensive yet fun way of entertaining. It also serves as a reminder of the almost magical ability of macaroni products to provide gourmet dishes at low cost. 2 tablespoons soft butter Ji cup walnut halves 1 unbaked 9-inch pie shell Use medium grater for apples that have been peeled and cored; pack gently but firmly into measuring cup. In mixing bowl combine apples, lemon juice, - rind, honey and the slightly beaten egg. Add salt, cinnamon, nut meg, flour and butter; mix well. Turn into unbaked pie shell made from favored rec ipe or pie crust mix. Cover pie filling with halv ed walnuts, pecans or other nuts. Invert a second pie tin over pie. Bake at 400 de grees (hot oven) for 15 min utes. Turn temperature to 350 degrees for 15 minutes. Re move top pie pan and con tinue baking 30 minutes. Cool on wire rack. Beet Sugar vs. Cane Sugar It seems that sugar is sugar. Scientists and home econo mists alike have tested and proven to their complete sat isfaction that beet sugar gives exactly the same kind of re sults as cane sugar. This is true whether used in jelly making, in canning, in bak ing, candy or any other type of cookery. Okeh? Lots of Family Fun With Popular Pop Corn It's mighty nice to have a few cans of pop corn around the house. Teen-agers, their fathers, uncles and all the kin can pop up a batch of pop corn in three minutes or less for a lot of winter fun. If you happen to have spe cial equipment, fine, but any good frying pan with a tightly fitting lid is ideal for pop ping today's high - popping corn. We say "tight fitting lid" advisedly; otherwise the power of the popping corn can make it practically hit the ceiling; fall like a snowstorm. Never saw anything like it. Every grain pops. Some pop corn comes with built-in sea soned butter; with others pro ceed as usual. Candied Pop Com Treats When are pop com balls not pop corn balls? When the basic mixture is gently press ed into an angel - food pan, cooled and removed by run ning a wet knife around the sides, then decorated with gum drops, crushed pepper mint sticks or other goodies . . . or when the mixture is pressed into a square cake pan and, when cooled, cut into easy-to handle bars . . . or when it is shaped like ears of corn and wrapped in "leaves" cut . out of green cellophane ... or when made into Snow Men with raisin eyes, nose, mouth and but tons, then topped with hat made of colored paper (any child knows how to make paper hats, if you don't hap pen to remember). Here's the basic recipe. 3 quarts popped pop corn 1 cup sugar 13 cup white corn syrup 13 cup water ' cup butter z. teaspoon salt 3,4 teaspoon vanilla Place the popped pop corn in a slow, 300 degree, oven to keep it hot and crisp. Stir and cook sugar, corn syrup, wa ter, butter- and salt until sugar is dissolved. Continue cooking without stirring until syrup forms a brittle ball in cold water (270 degrees). Add vanilla and stir only enough to mix it through the hot syrup. Place the popped corn in a large bowl and pour syrup over it slowly, mix well to coat every kernel. Shape into desired form by pressing gently with wet hands. PAY LESS... GET MORE... Compare the Clabber Girl, ounce for ounce, with that of other leading brands You'll b surprised! Clabber SW fs excJosfvety known as the baking powder with the balanced double action . . . balanced for nrriformrty in both mixing bowl and oven. CLABBER GIRL BAKING POWDER Irene Hollenbeck Completes Thesis Toward Her PhD Ashland - "A Report of an Oregon School Camp with Program Emphasis upon Out door Science Experiences" is the title of the thesis written by Miss Irene Hollenbeck, Southern Oregon college as sociate professor of science, fulfilling the requirements for the doctor of education de gree. Accepted by the faculty of the University of Colorado graduate school, the thesis has been bound in red with gold lettering. It was accomplished under the direction of Dr Harold M. Anderson, associate professor of the Colorado school. Purposes of the study as outlined by Dr. Hollenbeck were to ascertain the amount and kind of outdoor science experiences now provided for the children of Oregon by schools and other agencies, and to investigate the feasi bility and value of presenting outdoor science experiences at a school camp. Questionnaires Completed For the first part of the study. Dr. Hollenbeck ob tained data from question naires completed by 601 seniors in 24 of the 224 pub lie secondary schools in Ore gon. Survey findings were compared with those of a similar survey made of 495 college freshmen two years earlier. With Southern Oregon col lege and the Medford public schools as cosponsors, a pilot science school camp was or ganized and conducted in April of 1957 at a site leased from a church camp. Twenty-twoMifth and sixth grade children were taken on morning and afternoon field trips by resource experts in the areas of conservation, geology, ornithology, forestry, and aquatic biology. Evaluation of the research disclosed that too few chil dren in Oregon have an op portunity to participate in outdoor science experiments and that too little use has been made of skilled resource personnel as leaders of such experiments. Adjudged Worthwhile School camps were adjudg ed worthwhile because the children showed evidence of growth in an appreciation of the interrelationships of liv ing things and of the beauties of nature, developed knowl edges and skills related to outdoor science and outdoor living, exhibited desirable at titudes toward work and con servation practices, found areas in which their indi vidual abilities could be recognized, and acquired new science interests. Dr. Hollenbeck determined that the school camping pro gram was definitely feasible in southern Oregon and rec ommended that similar studies be made for other regions of Oregon, and that college courses for camp counselors include a unit on nature or outdoor science. A member of the SOC fac ulty since 1954, Dr. Hollen- ! beck, president of the Na tional Association of Biology Teachers, is also a member of the National Science Teach ers association, the National cost of 1 CLABBER i i girl II x mm - Guaranteed Dv -fj feod Haasekeepinl Off-Year General Election Seen With Nation-wide Presidential Editor's note: The only national election this year Involves Con gress, but looming large at the polls will be the shadow of the presidential election two years from now. Some of the ways in which the results on Nov. 4 could have an important bearing on the 1960 presidential race are analvzed in the following dispatch by "CPI Washington Burean Chief Lyle C. Wilson, who has been covering and interpreting national politics since By LYLE C. WILSON UPI Correspondent Washington -(IIPD- This so- called off-year general eleo tion is loaded with presiden tial politics from coast to coast. Democrats will be i especial ly interested in the returns from New York, Missouri. Michigan and Massachusetts. Democratic Gov. Averell Harriman's availability for the 1960 presidential nomina tion depends wholly on his ability to obtain re-election in New York by a big margin. A big win would not pro vide Harriman with more than a mere chance to be nominated for President. A slim margin of victory or de feat, however, would close the door against him with a bang. Sen. Stuart Symington, who seeks re-election in Missouri, is a Democratic presidential possibility. He is a border state, middle-of-the-road poli tico whom Northern left- wingers might be willing to support if they were of a mind to appease the unhappy Southern conservatives. They are not likely, however, to be so minded. Williams Seen Cinch Michigan's Democratic Gov, G. JVlennen Williams is gun ning for a sixth term as a political partner of Walter P. Reuther, who long since em erged as the Mr. Big of labor politics. Williams scarcely can lose, nor could a Demo cratic National Convention easily brush off a six-times winner in Michigan. His nomination for president would bust the Democratic party wide open and, probab ly, persuade Southern con servatives to bolt. Massachusetts is the baili wick of the Democratic Gold en Boy, Sen. John F. Kenne dy, an able and personable young man who inherited po litical ambition and a great deal of money. Kennedy is shoo-in for reelection and the bigger, his margin the better his opportunity to become the second Catholic to be nomi nated for President of the United States. First was Al fred E. Smith, of New York, in 1928. Looking for Pointers Republicans will be looking to New York, Pennsylvania, California and, somewhat to their astonishment, to Ohio for presidential pointers. In New York, Nelson A, Rockefeller, grandson of John D. the first, is the Republican nominee for governor. Rocke Association for Research m Science Teaching, the Ameri can Association for the Ad vancement of Science, and the American Association of Uni versity Professors. TAA TABLE ROCK ROAD AT SNOBOY FANCY CARROTS 2 s 15 LARGE RED RIPE TOMATOES J .29 LARGE GREEN CELERY . W THRIFTY BUY SWIFT'S PREMIUM . enucne . rrc I ckj SWIFT'S PREMIUM KHimj "Z..:":..: ib. SWIFT'S PREMIUM BACON -i- , 59' SWIFT'S SLICED BACON ENDS , .29 FRESH PACIFIC OYSTERS ... W feller and his political pals will run a high presidential fever if he is elected. Rockefeller's nomina tion for President, however, is not remotely likely. His import ance in the presidential pic ture would depend on his con trol of the New York delega tion to the 1960 Republican National Convention. There are Republican regulars who would regard Rockefeller as something of a New Dealer and, assuredly, as a Modern Republican with emphasis on the qualifying word. So, Rockefeller might ma neuver a convention .delega- NEW MINE DISASTER Rescuers carry body from coal mine at. Bishop, Va., after an explosion in the mine trapped 22 miners. All the trapped miners perished. SQUASBLE "You can't prove a single thing," shouts Gov. Williams of Michigan, angrily waving a finger at startled Paul Bagwell (left). The altercation flared up after a TV debate in Detroit, in which Republican Bag well charged that Williams' administration was driving industries and jobs away from Michigan. TlruW 4 CORNERS PHONE , tion which he controlled to ward the nomination of some one other than Vice President Richard M. Nixon, who is highly regarded by the party regulars. That, might not pre vent Nixon's nomination in 1960 for President but it would set up a real obstacle. A pretzel manufacturer named Arthur T. McGonigle is the Republican nominee for governor in Pennsylvania. If he wins, this Republican would offer his party a new name, a new face and new hope that the GOP might re establish itself as the major party in a big Eastern state. m NO 4-1511 INSTANT DRY MILK PARTY TOMATOES M.J.B. COFFEE NESTLE'S QUill BETTY 39 PANCAKE MIX NALLEY'S LUMBERJACK 49 SYRUP a m SWIFT'S Loaded Politics McGonigle is a business man who has made a lot of money for himself. He might attract a lot of Republican interest although . the conservatives might count him a bit soft on the labor issue. Republican Gov. C. William O'Neill of Ohio is not soft on the labor issue.- He is cam paigning for reflection and for the adoption of an amend ment to the state constitution which would outlaw the union shop. The nation and the Republican Party scarcely have been aware of O'Neill. They will be plenty aware of him after Nov. 4, however, if he is returned to office by a fat margin of votes and if the amendment which he has en dorsed is approved by the voters. A great many Republicans are listening anxiously if not very hopefully for a clear and strong conservative voice from the top echelon of the party. They might hear it from O'Neill, if he has such a voice, which remains to be deter mined. His record well be searched, if he is reelected, and his performance in office will be observed closely dur ing the next two years. Ambitions Challenged Nixon's presidential ambi tions are challenged by the disruption of the Republican organization in California Nixon contributed to this situation by joining in the pressure which compelled Re publican Gov. Goodwin' J. Knight to abandon his plan to seek reelection this year. Sen. William F. Knowland is the Republican gubernator ial . candidate in California. Knight is running for the seat which Knowland will vacate Knight refuses to endorse Knowland. This political mess becomes messier by reason of Knowland's endorsement of a right-to-work proposal to out law the union shop. Knight objects to right-to- work. Nixon visited his home state in September in an effort to repair the party ma chine, to get Knight and Knowland together and to put some oomph into the Republi can campaign in California. The word is that Nixon was unable to bring it off and, further, that Republican can- Westerners are Sweet on Spreckels Sugar ! , MIDGET PRICES Thursday, Friday, Saturday OPEN 8 A.M. TILL 7 PJVl. EVERY DAY PET TIME Drip or Regular 2V-b. CROCKER MILD SHARP OR BLEU CHEEZ PRESTO PENN CHAMP LIGHTER FUEL PLUS 5 FLINTS TCM& TIKIUM! didates in California probably will take a severe licking on election day. That would be bad for Nixon, whose prestige rides in some degree on the per formance of his party in his home state. On the other hand, if Knowland were elected governor he mgiht decide to shoot in 1960 for the Repub lican presidential nomination. That would not be good for Nixon, either. ITS FUH TO EAT ! MEXICAN FOOD M-M-Marvelous flavor! Different! Exciting! Hours of preparation re duced to minutes! You just heat and enjoy. . TcmKM. try: ROSARITA'S COMPLETE MEXieiN-OTlE DINNER .. Hwt' t hearty mel fer Herty appe tite 2 large Enchiladas. Beef Ta mils, Spanish Rice, Retried Beani with Cheese, Chill con Carne. Genuine Mexican siytw Food In minutes from freezer-to- oven-to-table! .12-Qt. size V-;.., 89 .22 size can lb. family size ... ... W u29 1.29 21 FREE