MONDAY. MAY 21. 1962
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Feeding the Family
By ZOLA VINCENT
food Cditor
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Flvor Pork Chopi
With Carawy "ood
If you're not already ac
qualnted witlf caraway seed
or think that it comes only
in rye bread, pick up a Jar at
the spice and herb counter
and try it in ways ke this.
Good, too, in gravies, in corn
bread, with braised liver and
In cole slaw. Pork chops are
reasonable in cost. For our
. double loin chops with pock
ets or eight regular pork
chops, proceed like this:
4 double or 8 regular
pork chops
4 cup minced onion or 2
tablespoons onion
flakes
2 tablespoons butter
4 cup finely diced mush
rooms (canned or
fresh)
1 tablespoon dried parsley
flakes
'4 cup toasted bread
crumbs
1 egg, beaten
Salt and pepper
4 teaspoon powdered '
thyme
4 teaspoon caraway seeds
Saute onion in butter; add
mushrooms, parsley and
bread crumbs and blend well,
Beat egg and add remaining
ingredients. Combine all,
Stuff into pockets cf large
pork chops or sandwich be'
tween single chops. Fasten
edges of pockets with tooth
picks or small skewers and
lace closed with strii.g.
Brown chops on each side
In buttered frying pan. Add
three tablespoons water. Cov
er pan and simmer gently un
til chops are tender; about an
hour. Gravy may be made
from Juices in pan.
Finger Foods Help
Small Fry Lean To Eat
Specialists in child care ad
vise giving plenty of "finger
food" to toddlers just learn
ing to feed themselves. Long
strips of cooked vegetables,
peas and lima beans can be
picked up with the fingers if
a spoon or fork taxes the
child's patience.
For safety sak little
hands should be well scrub
bed before each feeding ses
sion - but this is true of all
children and all mealtimes.
Round Dogi Can Go
German or Hawaiian
Someone discovered that
hotdogs would sort-of curl up
into a donut shape when cut
cross-wise almost' (but not
quite) through at half-inch in
tervals and fried in one-half
inch hot fat until lightly
browned.
Then came other Ideas like
these two. Place round hot
dog on buttered and toasted
hamburger buns and fill cen
ter with heaping tablespoons
of heated sauerkra' t. Now
top with one teaspoon salad
dressing and one-half tea
spoon prepared mustard. Put
bun top on and serve as
usual. For Round Dog Ha
waiian: use warm crushed
pineapple instead of -auer-kraut.
Green Beans on Toast
With Golden Chttia Sauce
Green beans, whole, long
and slender, fresh, frozen or
canned are delicious when
cooked or heated; arranged in
"bundles" on toast points and
served with Golden Cheese
Sauce. If you cook fresh
green beans, keep them crispy-tender
by cooking only 15
to 18 minutes. You've already
guessed that this cheese sauce
is also ideal for aspar. gus and
broccoli.
Vi cup (,i stick) butler
2 tablespoons flour
1 cup milk
3 egg yolks, beaten
lightly
2 tablespoons fresh lemon
Juice
,i cup grated sharp Ched
dar cheese
la teaspoon ground black
pepper
Salt
Toast slices
Melt butter in saucepan.
Remove from he..t and stir in
flour. Gradually blend in
milk. Cook over low heal un
til slightly thickened. Com
bine egg and lemon juice and
mix with the sauce. Heat one
minute. Stir in cheese, salt
and pepper. Continue cooking
over very low heat until
cheese is melted.
West Coit Foods
Males Planning Easy
Whether we realize it or
not, the chances are thai sev
eral items on the family's
table tonight came halfway
around the world to get there;
others came from nearby ac
reage but are shared with
families in far places. All
combine to make menu plan
ning easier; results better.
U.S. Department of Agricul
ture's Economic lesearch
Service tells us that over a
fourth of all imports to tTils
country are agricultural prod
ucts. This Is World Trade
Week, as you've probably no
ticed. As you'll quickly gui4s,
coffee is our biggest lmpo
with vast quantities of it com
ing into our San Francisco
ports for roasting, packaging
it
and distributing throughout
the country. Sugar is a major
import item. Dollar-wise, the
Port of Los Angeles i second
only to New York in food ex
ports and imports.
Our )ther food imports are
mostly tea, cocoa, fish and
fish products, meat and meat
products., Bananas are high on
the import list with some
dairy products, fruits and
vegetables., We export princi
pally fresh and frozen fruits,
fruit juices, shellfish and
wheat.
Local Market Buys
Produce departments are
brimming over with fine-flavored
abundance of fruits and
vegetables. Beautiful straw
berries and quality avocados
are in such good supply that
they are frequently specialed.
Apples, bananas, oranges,
lemons and grapefruit are
well priced. Cherries and
peaches are putting in their
first appearance of the year.
Most abundant vegetables in
clude asparagus, artichokes,
broccoli, corn, potatoes, on
ions, carrots, cauliflower and
soft squashes.
Best protein buys include
eggs, fine chickens and tur
keys, the longer cooking cuts
'Red Lantern7 File
Enables Banker To
Spot Bogus Checks
New York -0JPD- Albert F.
Texido has 38 years experi
ence working In a bank, a
growing number of things to
keep track of, and a file full
of "red lanterns."
The lanterns don't cast
much light except on how
people try to spend money
that isn't theirs.
Texido is in charge of a 12
member staff of one of the
nation's largest banks, the
Chase Manhattan, which
spends its entire time keeping
a check on checks for forger
ies. Telltale Signs
The "red lanterns" on
which he keeps a file are
those telltale signs which be
tray a bad check. The bad
check passer, as most read
ers of detective fiction will
remember, is known as a pa
per hanger.
of beef and lamb, cottage
cheese, milk and other dairy
products. A new milk half
w y between nonfat and
whole milk is now available.
This "2 per cent milk," or
"2-10 milk" as it is likely to
be called, is low-fat with ad
ded milk solids. .
As the number of check us
ers increases, Texido said, so
has the number of bad checks.
The number of checks is
growing daily and Texido and
his staff may look at 75,000
to 100,000 a day. Each staff
member is permanently as
signed to the checks of spe
cified companies, organiza
tions and individuals, and
may scan from 6,400 to 8,
300 checks a man.
This is no "mechanical eye"
or "automatic brain" process.
"A red lantern," explains
Texido, "is anything that
makes a check look fishy."
This may be a swirl that does
not "track" in a signature; a
blurred or obscure facsimile
signature; a check out of se
quence; a type of paper. A red
lantern turns up and the
check goes back to a bank
officer who gets in touch with
the person holding the ac
count against which the check
is drawn.
Com in Bundles
Checks come in bundles
from the incoming clearance
department of the bank; sig
natures are compared with
specimens kept in big rotary
files next to the desks. When
MEOrORB MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREW
Pickin' Pears
News and Notes
From Camp White
By WALTER TOWNSEND
Totem Poles at the art ex
hibit of the Senior Activity
center recently at 601 East
Jackson St., were a Sacred
Owl, a Frogman, and a "Mis
fit" of the Alaskan Indians,
created by Bernice Janowsky.
Her statuettes, Rebecca at
the Well, and Northwest
Mounted Policeman, aroused
interest among the adults.
But Jan Fuller, 7, looked in
wonder at the Totem Poles
and liked them best, she said.
Mrs. Janowsky, who stood
near her display, said her fa
ther and grandfather came
a check is established as a
fraud, a photostat is made of
it, and filed in a drawr.
"We've even refused to let
a check for nine cents go
through because we couldn't
make out the signature," Tex
ido said. Some of the fraud
ulent checks are for amounts
as high as $25,000.
Also kept is a "crazy file"
of illegible signatures, used
to help make out the ones
which come in a scrawl. Tex
ido explained that while most
people use their usual hand
writing in signing a check,
sometimes someone in a hurry
will write a check against a
cement wall or other rough
surface and that signature
can look like a red lartern.
across the plains in a covered
wagon. She does not claim
to be a pioneer, nor does she
belong to the Pioneer Society,
yet her father's mother was
Daniel Boone's sister.
People who stopped to view
her work found her interest
ing to converse with. Some
wanted to know how she
came to take up art as a
hobby?
"I'm a widow," she said,
"and I live in an immense big
house in Jacksonville - and I
found that making these stat
uettes gave me joy and relaxation."
A new face among chap
lains who have officiated at
White City, substituted for
Chaplain Eskay recently and
he was called upon to meet
an emergency in conducting
the memorial service for Mr.
Herzog. He did not know the
late director of the domicil
iary and in his eulogy depend
ed upon facts gleaned from
the record.
But like journalism, theol
ogy can at times be best ex
pressed by one who views the
scene for the first time. He
chose as his text the scriptur
al passage relating to the
steward who can be steward
no longer.
Father Brendan Shea, who
filled in on this difficult as
signment made a favorable
impression upon those with
whom he came in contact. He
is a westerner, well educated
and experienced in the ways
of life. Like the esteemed
postmaster of White City, Art
Scarseth, he comes from
Montana.
Premedical Course
He was born in Butte and
received his early education
there. He went to Carroll col
lege, Helena, where he took
a premedical course, intend
ing to become an M.D.
He chose theology instead,
and after attending St. Ed
wards Seminary at Kenmar,
Wash., and Mt. Angel, taught
theology there for 14 years.
Father Shea now teaches at
the parochial school in St.
Agatha's parish in southeast
Portland, and is principal of
the high school group there.
He is a Latin scholar as well
as a scientist, giving courses
also in biochemistry.
He was a substitute chap
lain at one time at Mountain
Home, Idaho, Air Base, and
f
GRADUATION
CARDS
When you care enough
to send the very best
CyjamV 217 E. Main
OH Bill S Medford
Swan Island Navy Base. He
knew Chaplain Frazee before
coming here, having met him
at the VA hospital at Boise.
On leaving, he left word
that he expects to be back
again.
About 5,000 unpaid volun
teers give data daily to the
weather bureau.
TOUCHES POWER LINE
Knoxville, Tenn. -IUPD- Har
ry Ambrose, engineering pro
fessor at the University of
Tennessee, was electrocuted
and his two sons burned Sun
day when an irrigation pipe
they were moving in their
backyard touched a power
line.
ISP
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