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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1963)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON MONDAY, JANUARY 21. 1963 H 1 'l llll I I Mill lllllll MIIMIM a H III I III I I'l ll I ll' fli lil''l'f DEMOLISHED CAR The driver ot this car, Marvin Lee Homilton, 19, of 895 Gib bon rd., is reported in poor condition at Rogue Valley hospital today suffering from e fractured right leg and head injuries received in the accident Saturday evening. His condition was reported "slightly im proved." The accident occurred at the in tersection of Highway 99 and 62 about 9:15 p.m., when Hamilton apparently turned on to Highway 62 then abruptly attempted to change over to Highway 99 and smashed into the traffic signal pole, police reported. ARRESTS GANG Salisbury, N.C. (UPD Po lice Thursday announced the arrest of 12 teen-age girls in connection with a shoplifting ring that stole only small items. Police Chief Dave Shulcr said the girls, ranging in age from 13 to 16, even took a bottle of pink cham paane but decided "it ain't so hot" Step Into Spring It' I A Oi 1 tip Hill 9292 IffiS SIZES ClL 36-50 Feeding the Family By ZOLA VINCENT Food Editor Bright-as-May look - just what you need to revive win- ipr-wcarv SDints ngni now: Sew this raglan-sleeved step in of cotton, Dacron, linen. Printed Pattern 9292: Wonv en's Sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46. 48. 50. Size 36 requires i-S, varris 39-inch fabric. THIRTY-FIVE CENTS in coins for this pattern - add 10 cents for each pattern for first-class mail. Send to Mari an Martin, Mcdford Mail Trihnne Pattern Dept., 232 Wost mill St.. New York 11 N.Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS with SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. FREE OFFER! Co-ipon in Spring Pattern Catalog for one pattern free - any one you choose from 300 design ideas. Send 50 cents now for Catalog. Good Ways With Fresh Grapefruit Broil Grapefruit - Prepare grapefruit by cutting in half, removing seeds and separat ing sections. Sprinkle one tea spoon brown sugar, honey, maple syrup or maple sugar over each half. Broil 10 min utes or until golden brown. Serve hot as first course or for dessert. Mint Grapefruit - Notch edges of prepared fresh grape fruit and dip in chopped Iresh mint. Top center with one half cube of mint jelly. Daisy Style - Arrange fresh navel orange sections around prepared grapefruit halves to resemble petals of a daisy. Place a fresh strawberry or cherry in center. If desired, notch edges of grapefruit. Hawaiian Style - Fill cen ter of prepared fresh grape fruit with wedges of fresh pineapple. If desired, sprinkle with one teaspoon sugar. Grapefruit Slaw - Here are eight generous servings. Slice one small (one pound) head cabbage into paper-thin shreds. Peel one small fresh grapefruit, cut into sections and add to cabbage. Combine one-quarter cup mayonnaise, one teaspoon fresh lemon juice, one teaspoon horse radish sauce and one-half tea spoon salt. Toss lightly with cabbage and grapefruit. Gar nish with sliced to. -ted al monds or peanuts, if desired. Teen Tower Anyone who thinks the younger generation is not cre ative should watch a teen ager build a sandwich. There are more than 200 varieties of sausages and cold cuts, says the American Meat Insti tute, and the teens seem to have a working knowledge of the entire list. Between two slices of bread and interlaced with a sur prising array of condiments, a Teen Tower may contain bologna, salami, minced ham, summer sausage, jellied corn ed beef, peppcroni, pickle loaf, liver sausage, head cheese, ccrvclat, tongue loaf . . . and of course whatever may be leftover from yester day's roast. Swiss Style Rockfish Fillets Rockfish, similar to sole, reaches the market usually as a fresh or frozen fillet. Each fillet is a fla., boneless piece of tender meat from the sides of the skinned fish. Weight of these fillets ranges from a quarter to a full Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF iVNE OF THE most powerful, and certainly the most ec- centric, of the old newspaper tycoons was James Gor don Bennett, owner of the New York Herald. In a fascinat' ing biography of Ben nett, Richard O'Connor tells how this amazing press lord scored a four-day-beat on all the rest of the country by print ing the complete story denied as long as possible by the War Department of Custer's disastrous defeat at Little Big Horn. Bennett also was the man who sent one of his lesser correspondents, Henry Morton Stanley, to search Africa for Dr. Living stone. It was Bennett, furthermore, who introduced polo to the TJ. S., founded the still-successful Pans Herald, and built the Newport casino. A wealthy but rather tUld banker from Oklahoma. brourht a beautiful yours; bride home with him from New York. "Shea the last word to me," enthused a friend. "How did you manage to meet herT" There nothing to it," boasted the banker. "I Just opened my wallet and there the wail" A lady In Tennessee has Just entered suit against a neighbor for using abusive language, claiming t0 damages lea 140 for the, abusive language she used in return, a C 1961, br Bit Orf. Dirtrtbutt bjr King Features Sradlctt The Family Council Kditor's not: The Family tounrll mnilsls of a iudtr. a plivrhiatrlsl, llirre clrrsvmfn, three editors and a women's rdilor. rich article U a summary of a family disaEreement presented to the Council- The Council deals with problents. major and minor, encountered bv guidance counselors and social workers. Edited by Mrs. Alma Denny, (t'opyrllhl by General Features Corp.) pound, depending on the size of the fish. Almost any cooking method may be used. The meat is lean and requires additional fat in cooking. Like most sea foods, it should not be over cooked or it will become tough and dry. 2 pounds fresh or frozen rockfish fillets 3 tablespoons lemon juice ',-3 teaspoon grated onion Vi cup fine bread crumbs Vfc cup grated Swiss cheese Vi cup butter or margarine Combine lemon juice and grated onion. Pour over fish fillets. Roll fish in bread crumbs that have been added to grated cheese. Melt butter or margarine in baking dish and place fillets side by side in dish. Bake at 350 degrees, 220 minutes, or until fish is easily flaked with fork. Serve with tartar sauce. Five serv ings. Cereal Speed-Up A cinch for speed is your breakfast bowl of cereal with its whole parcel of food values. You needn't . mention this to the children but actu ally . cereal with- milk and sugar gives them vitamin B complex, protein, energy values, calcium, iron and phosphorus.- That's good. Too, there's almost endless variety from which to choose; wheat, corn, oats and rice in all kinds of shapes, sizes, textures, tastes and even sounds. There's nothing in the Blue Book of Etiquette that says that ready-to-eat cereal should not be served right at the table with children and father too picking their favorites and re-filling as appetite demands. Put them all on a tray for easy transportation to and from the table. Eggs. Poultry, Beef, Pork, Pears, Potatoes Good Buys January plcntifuls arc many. We can't begin to list them all in the headline but we'll try for more here. Eggs are plentiful, high in quality, lower in cost. Eggs are recommended daily for people of all ages. Nutrition ists insist that morninj work ing efficiency Is increased considerably when a hearty breakfast is built around couple of eggs. So send the family to work and to school well fortified for the morn ing's problems with "two, sunny side up" or in other family favored ways. Beef Buys. There are many good buys in economy beef cuts - those that require long slow cooking. Now is ideal time for beef slew, beef short ribs, chuck or shoulder pot roast, flank or shank. How about corned beef for a change? Pork Cuts. Pork supplies, both cured and fresh arc in creasing . right along. Prices are favorable among shoulder roasts, chops, spareribs and hams. For something differ ent, try shoulder butt, picnic shoulder, pork hocks. And that brings to mind, sauer kraut and apple sauce, corn bread and buttermilk. Poultry. Abundance of broiler fryers, slewing hen., turkeys continues. Plenty of Potatoes. Potatoes lead the vegetable parade; bargain in good eating at any meal for fixing in ways be yond numbering. Plenty of artichokes, carrots, green and red cabbage, cauliflower, egg plant, lettuce, dry onions sweet potatoes. Winter Pears. Rejoice in the Anjou, the Cornice, the Winter Nells and the Bosc which long since ceased to be luxuries. Their abundance puts them easily in any bud get. Other fruit plentuuis include apples, avocados, bananas, grapefruit, grapes, navel oranges and highly sea sonal tangerines which tarry briefly. Dairy Products. The dairy Inoiistry keeps well ahead of Doiilation trends with an Beatrice Y. - She's in deep mourning. Why is she ashamed to show it? Sara B. - I'd act the same way. Why upset evcryuoay else? Beatrice Y. - We disagree about our neighbor. She has just lost her father, when he failed to recover from in juries in an automobile crash. Since her mother had died when she was 14, he was her only parent and they were very close. Nevertheless she hasn't shed a tear. I've heard this is bad for a person. It's better to let your self go. But with Mrs. W., even her husband is puzzled. At the funeral she was busy comforting him and their four children. She was the calmest one there. Somehow I know she's holding her grief back and that s not healthy. . Sara B. - Why should Mrs. W. carry on just because neighbors like Beatrice ex pect her to? She has her own way of bearing her sorrow. I know the pain must be deep. Her dad had an apart ment a block away from her home. They're a happy fam ily and the older man was in cluded in everything that went on - picnics, holiday celebrations, and birthday parties. Both Mr. and Mrs. W. loved to have him around. But maybe now she feels a certain peace. He is out of pain, even though she isn't. She has the comfort of know ing, however, that she was a loving daughter and did her best for him. And now she prefers to set a good example of quiet courage to her own children. The Council: One of the baser motives which un doubtedly impel people to attend funerals is to watch, and measure, the display of grief. It's a ghoulish interest. The bereaved are then cate gorized as anything from "prostrate" to "hard as stone." We applaud the neighbor under discussion for knenine her own council on what to do with her grief. She refuses to put on an act which friends, family, and spectators "expect." She hews to the line which she deems proper, mourning her father stoically and with dignity, sustained by her faith and her solici tude for her husband and children. That's all right for a brief period. But, in a turnabout, we agree with Beatrice, the first neighbor, that it s dangerous to hold back the free expres- sion of sorrow, just to make ! family and well-wishers mar-1 vel at how "wonderfully" the i mourner is "taking it." A i Presbyterian pastor, D. Hugh Pcniston, of Cottage Grove, Ore., has published a plea for what he calls "Death Edu cation," and all he seeks is better advice to the bereaved by doctors, clergymen, and friends. Grief, he points out, a complex emotion, with elements of shock, hostility, anger, and fantasy tied to it. These must be revealed, ad mitted, and resolved, before the mourner can be deemed safely 'settled." He tells of parishoners with the brave chin and stiff upper lip who, several years later, succumb to psychosomatic illnesses "undoubtedly related to their failure to obtain emotional re lief through the realistic ex pression of grief." In this case, then, these friends will be aiding Mrs. W. and her family if they sug gest she make sure she's doing what comes naturally. If tears want to come, she mustn't suppress them. They're not a sign of weakness. When sin cere, they're Nature's way of dissolving heavy bands around the head, throat, and heart which drag the mourn er down, no matter how chip per a face M turns to the world. Mrs. W.'s tears won't depress those who love her. They'll be glad she yields to the needs of sorrow. assured abundance of all kinds of fluid milks, cottage cneese, Cheddar cheese,' but termilk, dairy sour cream, ice cream and a score more pro ducts made from milk. Fish and Shellfish. Treat the family more often to sea sonal abundance of seabass, swordfirh, oysters, crabs and crab meat. Fish fillets and fish sticks are bargains along with canned tuna and sar dines. - 5 9 OSU Groups Oppose Meal Cost Increase Corvallis-IUPD-The women's interhall council and men's inter-dormitory council at Oregon State University have announced opposition to a proposed $40 a year increase in meal costs. In a joint statement the two groups said they would .continue the opposition "as long as the service and the quality of meals" do not im prove. T. F. Adamas, director of dormitories, said the increase is needed because student and civil service -.employees are seeking higher wages. 7 Official safety records over the years prove that Greyhound is 17 times safer than driving yourself. And Greyhound is safer than trains and planes, too. Wherever you travel, in any weather, for safety GO GREYHOUND ... AND LEAVE THE DRIVING TO US. 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