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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 30, 1962)
Feeding the Family By ZOLA Food Scalloped Vagalablat Ar Fina Summer Far One can scallop practically any of the fresh vegetables available in the markets and that goes also for practically any combination of fresh ve getables. Come to think of it, scalloped mixed vegetables is a mighty fine way to use up any and all cooked vegeta bles to be found lurking in the refrigerator. Just add a pound of sliced zucchini, a can of garbanzo or red kidney beans, a can of cooked onions or hominy to your leftovers, season well and serve with distinction. The French say "au gra tin." We say "scalloped." Materials are the same as for creamed vegetables. Stock may be used instead of milk in the sauce. Or tomatoes in stead of a cream sauce. Vege tables are very versatile. Arrange in a greased bak ing dish a layer of sliced or diced or whole small vege tables, a layer of sauce. Re peat until all is used. Sauce on top. Cover with buttered crumbs or crumbled corn lakes. Bake in moderate, 350 degree, oven, 15 to 25 minutes. Or bake in individ ual dishes or ramekins 12 to 15 minutes. Variations: Grated or thin ly sliced cheese is a popular addition. Always watch a scalloped dish to see that it doesn't get too dry. Hot wa ter, hot milk, hot sauce or to matoes may be added when necessary. Scalloped Potatoe While hot, pour creamed potatoes (many prefer them with lots of thinly sliced on ions added - and so do we); add or top with grated Ched dar cheese. Ten minutes in nven is about right. Scalloped Tomatoes No sauce is needed for scal loped tomatoes. Top three cups tomato pulp (cut up or chopped fresh tomatoes), and two cups buttered crumbs, V2 teaspoons salt, one table spoon sugar, dash of pepper. Cover for first 15 minutes. Bake 30 to 40 minutes. One to two tablespoons of chop ped chives and minced green pepper or pimiento are good additions to this. Famed Chocolate Refrigerator Cake This delicious chocolate re frigerator des?ert couldn'v be simpler and is truly a tri umph at dinner. Ground mace gives it a subtle goodness for this golden spice enhances both chocolate and cream. 8 ounce package thin choc olate wafers 2 cups whipping cream 1 i cup confectioners' sugar 'i teaspoon ground mace Chocolate decorettes Whip one cup cream with two tablespoons confection' ers' sugar and one-fourth tea spoon ground mace. Spread generously on chocolate wa fers; standing wafers on end to form a roll. Chill for two to three hours. Just before serving, spread Investment Funds Noon quotations on icleettd hock: Fund Bullock . Chemical Fund Colonial Ener Eaton Howard Stk .... Fidelity Fundamental Inveitnri Group Sec-Avia-Elec Group Sec-Corn Stk .. . Group Sec-Petr Keystone B-3 Keystone B-4 Keystone K-2 Keystone S-! Keystone S-2 Keystone S-3 .: Keystone S-4 Mass Inv Grth Stk .. . Nat l Growth Stocks TV - Elec . t'nited Accum United Canada Vnited Continental .... t'nited Income Vnited Science Value Line lnc Variable Wellington Rlii Aiken 11.54 12.65 9 .12 10.13 10.5B ll.7 13.7B R M Ml 11. SB in.3fi 14.70 B.97 4.4A in. 17 10.87 nan 3 61 6 R3 6 SI is.bo 6 SO 12 22 15 56 6 04 10.67 3 68 4 84 11.54 12.73 14.B6 B 13 7.03 12.66 11 31 16.04 9.79 4.90 20.01 11.86 13.08 3.95 7.46 7.32 16.95 7.41 13.36 16.91 6.60 11 66 6 21 3 29 5 55 3 99 GUNnToRO INGPIO THULIN CHtRUS I On At m. i " 3 k 0 H:45A.M. f BgssM ssasa" 2ND COMEDY HIT! ON AT 10:5 P.m. VINCENT Editor ESPS roll with more mace-flavored whipped c ream using re mainder. Decorate with choc olate decorettes which are available at any market. Slice diagonally to serve. Makes about six servings. Put Up Peach Or Apricot Jam Plentiful peaches and apri cots inspire us to easily and quickly "put up" a few glass es of jam. Follow simple di rections carefully and be proud of remits. Fruit must be finely sliced, mashed or ground to obtain enough li quid to dissolve the pectin. Combine two cups mashed or finely cut fresh peaches or apricots, four cups of su gar and one teaspoon powder ed citirc acid. Lei stand about 20 minutes, stirring occasion ally. Stir one package pow dered pectin into one cup water; bring to boil and boil rapidly for one minute, stir ring constantly. Remove from heat. Add the fruit and stir about two minutes. Pour into sterilized jelly glasses. Cover and let stand at room temper ature 24 to 48 hours or until jelled. Seal with paraffin and store in freezer, or it will keep several weeks in refrig erator. Makes six glasses. Coupons and Stamps Help Shrewd Shoppers In the final analysis, the high or low cost of eating (not to be confused with the high cost of living hich in cludes motorcars, mortgage money, cigarettes and bath ing caps) depends on the in genuity and resourcefulness of the individual shopper. Week end specials are one important way to get more groceries for your money and this is achieved simply by watching this newspaper's grocery advertisements and looking for the "specials pil ed high in conspicuous places in every super market. Deals with cents-off offer real savings. Packages down the super market aisle, plain ly marked, offer reductions of several cents. You can buy combinations or different products, (usually related items) packaged together at a lower price than when bought individually. There are special prices on bigger quantities of the same prod uct (3 for 29c, 7 for $1. and so on). Then there are free goods with the pure' se of a product and this often repre sents real savings. Purpose of all this is to get you acquainted with the product so that you'll come back for more, buy it time and again. Coupons are a big thing. Millions of coupons are de livered regularly by food and grocery manufacturers to consumers; often represent big savings. Same reason to get you acquainted with the product. Trading Stamps. About 40 million families save trading stamps. The majority of these shoppers save more than one kind of stamp. It is estimated that $720 million will be spent by trading stamp companies in buying merchandise to exchange for stamps in 1962. July Plentifuli Staple items among current food bargains include eggs, cottage cheese, Cheddar cheese, peanut butter, canned apple sauce, canned tuna, frozen orange juice, vege table fats, oils. Meat bargains include broiler-fryers, sicwing chick ens, turkeys, economy cuts of beef and lamb. Hamburg er, hot dogs and cold cuts are economical, satisfying. Every known fresh fruit and vegetable, excepting pos sibly parsnips, is available; of excellent quality. Fish fea tured includes salmon, hali- 3 42 lV.sabut, sea bass and scallops. JUIHN BUCSTfiN Kth,'fls WwE U Will BOYKR Ut 1. COBB PAUL HtNRUD ft a. ... . ..... T - GUTTED SCHOOL BUS - A fireman id Berlin, N. Y., in spects the gutted remains of a school bus which was the distance ot three football fields away from a propane gas 2 One-Car Crashes Checked by Police Two one-car accidents were reported to Oregon state po lice here Sunday, but neither one resulted in any injuries. At 6 a.m., a car operated by Donald Dale Jones, 21, of 235 Laurel St., Central Point, was traveling south on Highway 99 through Phoenix when it hit a traffic divider at the south end of town. The vehi cle slid across the highway, according to police reports, and hit a post. The car's left front and rear fenders were damaged exten sively. At 12:15 p.m. Sunday a trailer was demolished when it overturned on Highway 62 near Ginko rd., in the Pros pect area. The trailer was be ing pulled by a car owned by Emerson Perry Black, 67, of Grants Pass, police said. According to state police, Black was northbound and started to overtake a vehicle when he noticed that another car was attempting to pass him. Black then swung back into his own lane, causing the house trailer to tip over. Park Event Planned By Master Masons All Master Masons are in vited to the 14lh annual out door communication of the Klamath Falls Masonic lodge at Crater Lake National park on Saturday, Aug. 4, accord ing to W. L. Whytal, of the Klamath Falls lodge. The first section will be held at 10 a.m. (PDT). War ren lodge, Jacksonville, will put on the second section. A steward's lunch will be serv ed between sections. A dinner will be served at 5 p.m. The Jackson County Shrine Club Chanters will entertain. The 1961 meeting drew more than 300 Masons from 15 states and Canada, it was reported, Twenty-seven Ore gon and 42 California lodges were represented. Signs will mark the route to the meeting, or National Park Service personnel may be asked for directions, Why tal said. Librarian Dies Arlington -HOT- Mrs. Lillian Elizabeth Sncll Wheclhouse, Arlington city librarian and former postmistress, died here Saturday. She was 84. She was an aunt of former Oregon Gov, Earl Sncll. Survivors include three daughters, seven grandchild and nine great grandchildren. Funeral services were sche duled for Tuesday TONITE and TUESDAY PIUS ThrS IAUGH One 61 and 125 WCS on i MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, n Q !setj ' Foreign Briefs PHOTOGRAPHIC EXHIBITION CITES TAYLOR Tokyo-IPI'-The Communist radio Hanoit claimed today that a photographic exhibition in the North Vietnamese capital shows Gen. Maxwell Taylor, new chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, "illegally" entering the demilitarized zone between North and South Viet Nam. The exhibition ii entitled "The Struggle for Viet Nam's Reunification," the broadcast said. RESTRAINT ASKED ON SEX LIFE Hong Kong-mni-Communist China is urging 11a citizens to "restrain . . . your sexual life" In efforts to control the population growth. A recent issue of the Peiping Daily Worker indicated the government is placing new emphasis on birth control amid estimates the country's population has reached more than 700 million. TYPHOON MOVES TOWARD TokyoiUPII-Typhoon Nora with center winds of 75 miles The typhoon was located Okinawa this afternoon, moving northwest at 12 miles an hour. By Tuesday afternoon the storm was expected to be cen tered about 171 miles south-southeast of Okinawa. Shortages Found in Government-Owned Storage Warehouses Washington-llPll-T h e Agri culture Department said to day investigators have uncov ered shortages of more than one million bushels of government-owned corn and soy beans stored in commercial warehouses. The shortages may grow. As of May 31, there were more than I B billion bushels of corn and 77 million bush els of soybeans stored under either government ownership or as security for price sup port loans to farmers. There also were more than 1.2 bil lion bushels of wheat in stor age. Protected by Bond The government is protect ed by a liability bond on all stored commodities. The shortages were uncov ered in Michigan, Ohio. Iowa, and Illinois. Court action has been taken to appoint receiv ers to take control of the short warehouses and issue restrain ing orders against further shipments of grain by the warehousemen. The Agriculture Depart ment said other measured shortage cases were under in vestigation, but specific ac tion had not been taken. The department said "some what more than normal in stances of shortages" of government-owned grain were turned up during the recent heavy reduction in its com mercially stored grain sotcks. Doori Open at 6:45 Show SUrts t 7:00 DOCKET Of T TMfW "jI b in te HvH MEDFORD. OREGON .i Hf-."-. 0b ?K ai t, j ;t-."-rT5Sr,'V i nt ' ..1 AAjtT truck explosion Wednesday. The blast, in which two per sons died, leveled 11 homes, a church and a garage. (UP1) OKINAWA moved toward Okinawa today an hour. 345 miles south-southeast of The reduction resulted from the feed grain program, heavy exports, and heavy domestic consumption by livestock and poultry. More than 600 mil lion bushels of corn were sold in recent weeks to liquidate certificates.in-kind under the 19R1 feed grain program. "The pull down in storage stocks is making obvious whatever shortages there were," the department said. It also said "there has been a substantial tightening up in the warehouse inspection ef fort." Over-the-Counter Western Stocks By United Press International Rid A.'kPd Bank nt America SO AS Cal Pur Uttl 22' 24', Con Freight 10'n II1 Cyprus Mines 21 't 2.1 Equitable SAL 37 40 H First National Bank .... Aft nn Jantzen 27 2fi ' Morrison Knudsen 3 J 1 Mult Kennels ... 4'4 4", Oregon Metallurgical I I1, PPA.L 24 2fl PC.E Jl1! 2.V., IIS National Bank fi7 72'4 t'nited Util 2R'n 2fP, West Coast Tel 174 in Weyerhaeuser 2.V 27' Cottage Grove Fire Destroys Box Cars Cottage Grove-A fire blam ed on hoboes destroyed five box cars And thieatenrd two tank cars in the railroad yards here Saturday night. Trainmen pulled two lank cars containing gasoline and propane gas to safety with a dicsel engine. Cottage Grove firemen con trolled the blaze after about two hours. Oretfm Liqur Stiles Climk T Record Hiyk Portland -H'Pli- The Oreon Liquor Control commission sold today thnt liquor lo In store nr1 RKrncirfl In thq atalc climbrri to a rrcord high In Ihf 19S1-H2 fiscal year. The commiKfion ald the 5r wrre SSI ,7HS,n22. an in-creaj- of Sl.740.091 or 3.4R per cpnt over thf prrvinun fi cal year. The gain was attribute to ai an increase in pne J r J. f 'dMiLSWXt J (Wl I me nul hjalth lAviMm 4J!r, t'f. flM'it fttfaVlfl I 1I hnlrT first rr,PHna li 7.1 Tftt. . , ..nmv. . HI ' w sz-a "r a. . 1 v,k-5:-1 i.'.V-J.:.")..S J Ini 3 . - mi 3 iiii Weather Medford and vicinity: Fair to nisht and Tuesday. Scattered eve ning Ihundershoweri over Cascades and Siskiyous. Low lonight 55-60. HiKh Tuesday 100. Western Oregon : Generally fair through Tuesday, except for low clouds along coast with some fog and a little drizzle night and morn ing and patchy low clouds northern Interior. A few Isolated thunder storms southern mountains this afternoon. Little change In temper ature. Low tonight 46-58. High Tuesday 82-8R north, 100 in south Interior. 60-65 along coast. Northern California - Fail luiuKiii and Tuesday, except scattered thunderstorms In high mountains and log and low overcast along coast. Little temperature change. I.OCAl. DATA TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday : aDove normal a. Record high this date 103 in 1959 Record low this date 46 in 1017. PKEUIPITATION: None. Total this month Trace, .17 in. below normal. Total since Sept. 1 15,38 In., S.57 In. helow normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest vesterdav tar;,, highest thla a.m. 67r... Hlsh 4:00 24"- C1TV Yester- a.m. hr. Low Prer. Rrookinffs Grants Pass Howard Prairie Klamath Falls .. 59 97 S4 47 MEDFORD Portland Seattle fll Spokane 9(1 Yakima flfi Eureka Sfl Red Bluff 99 Sacramento 01 San Francisco 00 Los Angclea SI Phoenix in7 Denver flfl Chicago S9 Miami Beach fl9 New York . B2 Washington, D.C. .. 7J sn SI us -in FIVE-DAY FORECAST (Throilfh Aur. 4): Western Oregon - Western Wash ington Little if anv precipitation, except a little drir.zle along imme diate coast. Temperatures averag ing ahove to much above normal. Maximum mostly in fids in west ern Washington, and upper flos and nns western Oregon. Minimuma mostly in 30s. Northern California No pre cipitation except scattered thun dershowers at times In high moun- alns. Temperatures near normal. Portland Livestock Portland (UPI) USDA Cattle 1.300, Good lo cholct? slaitRhlcr ttnem inso lb. 27.23; pood to choice ila tighter heifer 2.V2IV cows nUnrinrd lfl-20; utility 12-16; canner-cultir 10-14, Calves 250. Chntce vcalrg 200 300 lb. 20-27; medium and good feeders 22-S&; choice to 27. Hog 500. No. t and 2 100-230 harrnwi and fi'Hi 20MJ-21; nowi No, 1 and 2. 270 lb. 17..V): No- 1, 3 and 3. 3fl5-570 lb. 12-14 SO. Sheep 2.000, Choice and prime upriiix slaughter lambs IB . 10-It) 50; near 90 lb 10.7S; Rood and mixed good and choice 70-S0 lb. Ifi-IR.IO; feeder choice and fancy 14-1S; good and choice 10-14, Portland Produce Portland (UPI i Dairy trtark.t: KRgi To retailer; AA extra large, 43-4Gc; AA large 40-4.V. A large 3-42c; AA .nedmm ;U-HSr-AA small 24-30c; cartons l-3c higher. Butter To retail,-' AA and A print H7c; carlom lc highfr; fl prints fi6c. Cheese imedium mredi To re tailer: 47-48'jC; proceM.-d Ameri can 3-10 lb. loaf. 4S-4f.,.j;. Porlland lUPIi Hi fined rhitkeim Nn t grade riiefd to retailers; f rycri, whole drnwn, 32 3Ilc Ih ; cut-up. 3R-42c lb : hens, light type, whole drawn, 23-20c Ih ; light tvpe hens, rut-up 2fi-34c lb ; heavy whole 36-3f)c lb. ra. FIRST RUN Novar Brjfor Shown JOSCPH KAUFMAN PIWSCNTS . vi v una r,( j jl, muinm JTfMNHl A ..,.. Maimic oh cm Km All Tim. lt ihv.m,-n,d . J v f - a mj& j m. its- Ma- x r i m 1 1 iiim-nr-wr. m OBITUARIES MRS. MONA TETREAULT Mrs. Mona Tetreault, Jack sonville, wife of R. J. Tetre ault, died Sunday evening. Funeral arrangements are en trusted to Siskiyou Funeral service directors of the Chapel in the Trees Mortuary, ELEANOR BOUSSUM Mrs. Eleanor Boussum, of Medford, died Sunday in a local rest home. Funeral ar rangements will be announced by Conger-Morris funeral di rectors, of Medford. EARL GREEN Earl Green, of Rogue River, died Sunday in a Portland hospital. Funeral arrange ments will be announced by Conger-Morris funeral direc tors. EDITH CULLOP Ashland Edith Cullop, 41, died this morning in Ashland General hospital. She made her home at 579 Litway st. Ashland. Mrs. Cullop was born Oct 4, 1920. She is survived by her husband, Woodrow Cul lop, and two children. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Litwiller's Funeral home, Ashland. JOHN BRINER Ashland-John Lyle Briner, 72, died Saturday at his home, 784 A St., Ashland. Funeral services will be held Tuesday. July 31, at 10:30 a.m. in Litwiller's Mountain View chapel, with the Rev. Wendell Herbison officiating. The body will lie in slate until the time of the funeral and Interment will be in the Stearns cemetery in Talent. Mr. Briner was born July 7, 1890, in Perrydale, Ore. He lived in the Rogue valley for 70 years. He was married to Alta Scott in Yrcka, Calif., in Au gust, 1918. Survivors include Mrs. Briner, a daughter, Mrs, Richard Ditsworth, Talent; a sister, Mrs. Elfa Long, Tal- I ent; and three grandchildren, Norman ana wayne fu- worth, both with the U.S. .lavy; and Glenda Ditsworth, Talent. LAURA McCALL Ashland - Mrs. Laura Mc Call, ot Ashland, died Sun day at the home of her cranddaushter, Mrs. Martin Ruddock, Klamath Fills. The body will be forwarded by Conger-Morris, funeral direc tors, to her home in Man- kato, Minn., for services and interment. Mrs. McCall was born Aug. 22, 1878. in Mankato, Minn. Her husband, William, pre ceded her in death in 1056. For the past ten years she had made her home with her daughter, Mrs. Harold Rau, Last 2 Nile HURRYI HURRY! Please Don't Mi Thi DISNEY HITI Alve Xa Jbun! Watt Disney FRED ' JANE VIACMURRAY-WYMAN TONIGHT SHOW STARTS 8:09 P.M. In Soutltorn Qrtigp i 6 Monday. July ao. 253 Eighth St.. Ashland. Surviving are three chil dren, Archie McCall, Anoka, Minn., Harold McCall, Marshficld; and Mrs. Harold Rau, Ashland; seven grand children; ten great grandchil dren; five brothers, Donald Thayer, Youngslown, Ariz., Dexter Thayer, Ret o, Nev., Frank Thayer, Faribault. Minn., Oren Thayer, Minnea polis, Minn., Dayton Thayer, Faribault, Minn., and one sis ter, Mrs. Julia Eager, Garden City, Minn. Guard Convention Elects President Salem -flIPli- Col. Laurence M. Blaisdell of Salem is the ! new president of the Oregon ' National Guard Officers Asso ciation. ! Blaisdell, commanding offi cer of the 249th Air Defense Artillery group at Salem, was elected at the group's 35th an nual convention here Satur day. He succeeds Col. Donald N. Anderson. Elected vice president was Lt. Col. Patrick O'Grady of Portland. Named second vice president was Col. William B. Foster of McMinnville. The members set the Port end Air Base as the site for their 1963 convention, which will be held Sept. 14. Lt. Col. John L. Ryan, commanding officer of the 6th U.S. Army at San Francisco, addressed the 282 officers gathered at the Salem Arm ory Auditorium. Two Persons Flown By Mercy Flights Mrs. Richard Shaver was the 1450th patient flown by Mercy Flights, lnc!., when she was taken from Medford to her home in Everett, Wash., July 27. She was accompanied on the flight by her husband and two children. The Shaver family was involved in an au tomobile accident here July 26. Also recently transported by Mercy Flights was Mrs. W. H. L. Morgan, Ukiah, Calif. She was taken from Kelsoe, Wash., to Ukiah, where she was transferred to a hospital in Santa Rosa, Calif., for treatment ot an illness. 20 million dreams that came true with HFC cash yours can, too! IT'S A FACT-HFC has made 20 million loans the past ten years, But, more impor tant, 20 million human needs have been filled. For an HFC loan can mean a home modernized, or a number of debts paid off ... an operation taken care of ... a young man with better schooling and a more promising career ... a better car or a good vacation for a deserving family. When a loan can help your dream to come true, borrow confidently from HFC. Whatever your needs, Household Finance will serve you with fairness and consideration. You'll like the understanding help you get from the company with 84 years' experience. Life intMw.nce at group rate U available on all Umn CJ MONTHLY PAYMINT PLAN! ""J"1 U n " X piMli P4Mh pMimlt fiiymh $100 S 5.90 $ 6.72 $10.05 $18.46 MO 11.81 13.44 20.09 36.92 m 17.71 20.16 30.14 55.38 ,M0 M.RS .TJ.97 49.64 91.66 1000 53.S9 62.21 95.64 179.56 HfiO 77.87 onnB 1 10.57 P66.36 that pari tit UU4 nrt t4t tMKI. 2 ItW f'i UUirt n urtif t l"V d ti4ij $100, iM)N dy riat " j8 A 11 Festival Plays Tonighti "Henry VI, Part II" Tuesday. "As You Like It" Wednesday: "Coriolinus" Thursday: "Comedy el Errors." Curtain timet 8:30 p.m. Births WHITE -To Mr. and Mrs. Wilton A., route 1, box 453, Centra! Point. July 30, 1962, a boy, 7' pound, at Crater Osteopathic hospital. PIZZA PARLOR TRY OUR FAMOIH PIZZA SUPREME MADE WITH 7 KINDS OF CHEESE, BAKED IN 7S09 OVENS FRIENDLY FAMILY ATMOSPHERE Lug or Smtll Ptrtiei ALWAYS WELCOME OPEN NOON DAILY ORDERS TO GO 773-7721 BETWEEN RIVERSIDI AND CENTRAL ON EAST JACKSON J15 E. JACKSON MEDFORD i - 36j SHAKEYS mmmSa Wednesday (ji the rapitol. 0 ,f - - y a q.nrWM 0 o . 0 eo a