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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 10, 1963)
Feeding the Family MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON WEDNESDAY. JULY 10. 1963 By ZOlA VINCENT Food Editor Sandwich Reminders For Laiy Week Ending Since tastes in sandwich making range from conserva tive cheese-on-rye to magnifi cent heroes, a make-your-own assortment of breads and fill ings is an excellent plan; cer tain to satisfy everyone. A choice of breads might in clude hamburger, h o t d o g, onion or other specialty buns, French bread for garlicking, French sour dough bread, rye, pumpernickel, white, wheat, raisin, sesame, or other o( the multiplicity of breads avail able. Cold cuts andor delicates sen meats are top favorites along with ready-sliced cheeses offering infinite va riety. Canned meat shelves of fer great variety also. Sand wich fillings such as chicken, tuna and egg salad mixtures can be made ahead of time and refrigerated, ready for quick production. Generous bowl of mayon naise, plenty of room-temperature butter, mustard, catsup, relishes and heaps of dill pickles are customary. Over size salt shaker and pepper mill are essentials. Natural accompani m e n t s are potato andor corn chips which now come in many styles and flavors. Gala Dasserti Natural first choices for dessert at this festive time are well-chilled watermelon, cantaloupe or other melons. Fruits in season include peaches, plums, grapes, apri cots, sweet cherries, figs. America's favorite dessert, ice cream, will be the choice of many, dished, parfaited or in cones for easiest eating. Cones are far and away first choice with the younger gen eration. There is certain to be a homemade or baker-bought cake, cupcakes, brownies, chocolate morsel cookies, macaroons or a big package of assorted cookies. Thirst Quenchers Beverages take on added importance in outdoor meal planing. Everyone seems to get thirsty more often. Have on hand plenty of milk; an as sortment of carbonated bev erages iced handily in a tub; lemonade, good and tart, or any flavored fruit punch that is made quickly from canned, glassed or packaged quick beverage makers. The most popular of the in stant soft drink mixes comes in 12 flavors; each is delicious on its own or in combination with canned or frozen fruit juices, fresh or frozen fruits, carbonated water or sherbet. To make two quarts, or eight tall glasses, simply combine one package of the mix with sugar and water as indicated on the package. It is so easy to prepare that the children can have fun making it them selves. Peach Baskets Baskets of juicy fresh peaches are being scooted from market to kitchen by homemakers eager to put them into good things for pleasing the family. We sug gest putting some of this bounty into edible baskets spread inside with a fluffy cream cheese mixture; then filled with peaches sweetened with brown sugar. Eight bas ket tarts. 2 cups biscuit mix 3t cup cream OR Vi cup milk and i cup butter, melted 2 tablespoons sugar 1 3-ounce package cream cheese -'4 cup cream 1 quart sliced fresh peaches ' cup brown sugar Heat oven to 450 degrees (hot). Add cream and sugar to biscuit mix. Mix thorough ly with fork. Knead 10 times on floured surface. Roll dough one-eighth - inch thick. Cut into eight rounds with a four or five inch cutter or use top of coffee can. Fit rounds over backs of well-greased custard cups, tart pans or muffin pans. Bake about eight min utes until evenly browned. Remove from cups or pans immediately. Beat cream cheese and cream until fluffy. Spread insides of shortcake baskets with the creamed cheese mixture. Fill tarts with peaches sweetened with the brown sugar. Bang-Up Values Piled High in Local Markets Picnic supplies will head every shopping list as the summer looms. Local stores have been preparing for this peaking of the picnic season for weeks. Outdoors appetites are big ger; there's more snacking; more sharing. There's far greater inclination to take it easy and that goes for every one in the family. Ready-prepared and easy-to-prepare foods will be high on all lists. First and fore most, put in adequate supplies of paper products for practi cally painless picnics. There are good buys in tur keys, broiler-fryers, beef, lamb and spareribs for barbe cuing. Hotdogs and hamburg er, favorite fare of the chil dren, are certain to be fea tured. Cold cuts from the delicatessen department and canned meats for chilling and slicing will make many a good b u f f e t-type, serve-yourself meal. Canned fish, of course Vegetable Variety. Nature's bounty is piled high in fresh produce departments. Among the "musts" are corn on the cob, potatoes for foil-baking and for making potato salad; lettuce varieties for salad toss ing, firm large tomatoes for slicing, cucumbers for wrap ping in dairy sour cream, crisp celery for eating plain or stuffed with exciting mix tures. Radishes and green on ions, white, yellow and pur ple, for slicing and for going into myriad salads. You'll want cabbage for coleslaw, crunchy. carrots and green peppers for many uses. Fruils-Meloni. Watermelon, of course, chilled and lusci ous; fresh peaches, plums, apricots, cherries, cantaloupes Bank Holdup Man Kills Self Portland -WPD- A gun-toting tailor robbed a southeast Portland bank Tuesday after noon and then shot and killed himself when he was cornered by police. The robber was identified as Robert L. Perry, 47, Port land. Perry, armed with a .25 caliber pistol, took $1,527 from the Milwaukie - Powell Branch of the U.S. National Bank shortly after 2 p.m. The end came about an hour later only one block away after a Jong chase in which Perry fired shots at bank employee Terry Tierke and a policeman. Neither was hit. When faced by policemen Lawrence Hagen and Willard Thompson he put his pistol to his temple and fired. "I told him to drop his gun or I'd shoot him," Hagen said. "He said 'all right, all right and then blowie." The stolen money was found stuffed in his pockets. Perry was employed as a clothing cutter at the Fore caster Manufacturing Co. in Portland. Albany Firm Buys Portland Company Nortland - (WD - Northwest Industries, Inc., of Albany Tuesday announced purchase of Product Engineering Co. of Portland in a move that com bines two of the Northwest's major producers of industrial components. No purchase price was an nounced. Northwest Industries spe cializes in fabrication of cor rosive - resistant, refractory and reactive metals for use in the chemical, aerospace and pulp and paper industries. Product Engineering is the largest die casting firm in the Northwest. President Charles W. Mc Cormack of Northwest Indus tries said the Portland firm will be operated as a subsidi ary and will be expanded in the fields of custom die cast ing, plastic molding and die making. SWEDEN VISIT PLANNED Stockholm, Sweden - MPD -Gen. Earle Gilmore Wheeler, U.S. Army chief of staff, will visit Sweden Aug. 12-17 as a guest of the Swedish army, it was announced Tuesday. Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF- T3EFORE EACH of them became famous singly on Broad L way, Judy Holliday, Betty Comden and Adolph Green had a nightclub act that sent audiences into gales of laugh- vcr. juiey repealed ineir triumph when invited to perform for the Dutch Treat Club but one fa mous gentleman at a table directly in front of them never smiled once. It was former President Herbert Hoover, and Judy Holliday in particular was determined to break down his resistance. "If this number doesn't get him," she whispered to me, "I give up." Alas, Mr. Hoover again watch- l-o ed impassively and his rather solemn expression never changed. Directly the meeting was adjourned, however, Mr. Hoover came up to the three young performers and told them warm ly, "You kids have the jolliest, most original act I've seen in years. I don't remember when I've had a better time. You're going to go very far:" "But Mr. President," interrupted the delighted Judy Holliday, "we were watching you particular ly, and you never smiled once!" "I know," nodded Mr. Hoover. "I never have learned to smile on the outside. But inside, I was smiling all over!" Warning broadcast by Tom Poston: "Beware of the girl who runs her fingers through your hair. She's probably after your scalp!" .. .. . O 1963, by Bennett Cert. Dlitributed by Klnf Features Syndicate 1 and other seasonal melons. Strawberries will give real joy to many meal-planners, along with Olallies and other berries. Figs are a real treat and the first of the 1963 apple crop, the white Astrachans have appeared. Plenty of avocados for summer salads. Mora Musts. Extra supplies of milk, butter, ice cream and other creams; dozens of eggs for innumerable uses. Mayon naise and peanut butter. A gallon of dill pickles. FIBERGLASS PANELING 4 26" Wide In 8', 10' 12' Lengths Choice of White, Beige, Green or Coral Colors BUY NOW AT THIS LOW PRICE! -3 Days Only- THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY Cornar 6th and Fir St. ' 1 Plenty or rree ramng .A 5333 Lumber Issues To Be Discussed Washington - OIPO - S e n s. Henry Jackson and Warren Magnuson (both D-Wasli.) an nounced today that U.S.-Ca; nadian talks on lumber issues will be discussed at a meeting to be held here shortly after Labor Day. Assistant Secretary of State Griffith Johnson advised the senators that agreement to hold a formal session was reached in a preliminary meeting with the Canadians Tuesday. Magnuson and Jackson also said they had been told that an enlarged private industry advisory group will be ap pointed to participate in the session as part of the U.S. team. The advisory group, with broad industry represen tation, is to be selected by the Department of Commerce. Court Records MEDFORD MUNICIPAL COURT Robert Chester Messinger, vio lation of basic rule. $10, Edgar Allen Pool, improper lane usage. $10; no operator's li cense In possession, $3. John Hansen Miller, violation of basic rule, 15. Jackie Marion Day, no opera tor's licence. S3. Helen Lucille Moore, improper right turn. S10. Rayma Jane Bateman, Improper left turn. SI0. Ina Cunningham Alenderfer, im proper left turn. $10 David Earl Gregory, violation of basic rule. $10. J l X ".- - -St, "Pi . i I'SrO-V-;'' V if x -fx OBTAINS DIVORCE Sandra Jo Crosby, 25-year-old former Las Vegas showgirl, is shown after she obtained a divorce ending her four-year marriage to Phillip Lang Crosby, 29. son of crooner Bing Crosby. Superior Judge Edward Brand granted the interlocutory decree after hearing Mrs. Crosby testify her husband stayed away from the family home for three and four days at a time. Under terms of a property settlement, young Crosby will, pay $1,000 monthly alimony for five years, plus $500 a month for support of the couple's two children. (UP1) In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS The big news today? I reckon it's still the com munist pow-wow in Moscow. WHAT goes on there? There are two angles to the news. One is that Premier Khru shchev met with former NATO Secretary Paul Henri Spaak, who is a Belgian. The meeting was In the Ukraine. The Ukraine Is one of the So viet Socialist Republics. The official story is that he remained far from Moscow as a calculated SNUB to Old Mao and his Chinese commu nists, who have come to Mos cow for a conference with their Russian communist partners. IS THAT a snub? Well, how would you feel about it if you had arranged a big conference on the good of the order with a person you were supposed to regard as an associate and he ran out on you deliberately? You would be miffed. rUT- A As Hamlet remarked to his uncle: "One may smile and smile, and be a villain. At least, I'm sure it may be so In Den mark." It may also be so in the com munist hierarchy. Old Kroosh and Old Mao may be putting on a show for us in the hope that we will let down our guard so they can hit us when we aren't looking. WHAT do our diplomats (our professionals In this some times complicated business of diplomatic intercourse) think of it? Well, they have their fin gers crossed. They point out that these current Moscow IDEOLOGI CAL talks (the diplomats also use big words) are concerned with the MEANS rather than the ENDS of communist doc trines. Moscow and Peking, these Western diplomats say this morning, agree that commu nism should wipe out Western capitalism , . . and so their dispute is over whether this should be accomplished through Moscow's policy of PEACEFUL COMPETITION or Peking's policy of armed revolution - which means KILL OFF the capitalists and take over their world. They add- Khrushchev might pursue his talks with Western leaders' on "key issues of tension," but he wouldn't lose sight of tha Marxist-Leninist goal of COM MUNIST CONTROL OF THE WORLD. WE must always remember that in Lenin's Ten Com mandments of Revolu t i o n, Commandment No. 2 reads: "There are no morals in poli tics." Commandment No. 6 reads! "Truth does not count unless It serves an end." Command ment No. 9 is "Promises are like piecrusts: made to ba broken." And here is Com mandment No. 10: "Scheme . . . zigzag . . . retreat . . . any thing to hasten the coming of communism." We mustn't permit our selves to forget that Khru shchev is a communist. HUGE CROSS PLANNED Messina, Sicily -flJPD- Local church authorities Tuesday announced plans to erect a huge cross. 130 feet high and 65 feet wide, atop 3,706-foot Ml. Dinnamare in memory of the late Pope John XXIII. NORFI ELD'S JULY CLEARANCE SHOE SALE! NOW IN PROGRESS Sttll Good Selection of Sizes, Stylet, Colors SICKS R.MHItR BREWING CO.-SEATTLE. WASHINGTOM DISTRICT COURT Donald LeRoy Blunketl Jr., ex ceeding baa limit, S3 5. Don Mavis, overlength load. SIB Ronald Eugene Sutton, violation of basic rule, Sio. Donald C. Barnett, overlength load. SIO. Ross Delwyn Wagner, no rear view mirror. S5. John Roy i ton Hart, failure to Stop. S3. George Crank Van Galder, no public utility permit. $23. Paul Richard Robdcen, violation ol basic rule. 115. Roger Edward Klrkpa trick, no operator's license. S3. David Peter Serry, no vehicle license. $3. wtilts Eugene Hanson, no muf fler. 3. George Justin Elliott, Improper left turn. $13 Donald E. Taton, overload. $7fl. William Henry Bohl, truck speeding, $10. Gerald Theodore Cruaon, no ve hicle license. $3 Kenneth Joe Houghton, Central Point, driving while license sus pended. $50 Bruce Arthur Merlckel, dis nheved stOD Slfn. $3. Edward Vranklln Bennett, vio lation of basic rule. S3. cinri'lT cOfftT Joseph A McCalvy vs Geral- dine F McCalvy. divorce com nlaint Caroline Canfielrf vi Charles Henry CanfieM divorce decree. Jean L Loydon vs. Robert C. riivnrce decree. Clyda Jean Bhatt vi Rs)tnt knt Premshenker Bhatt, divorc flarra i Eva Jean Thrasher vs. Robert I rranci Thrasher, divorce decree WeVe toraei the Short B M W yit ' i' ,v '"' " ' '' - - -' ' ' ' v"' 4 b 1 4 - ' IP"' '. 1 I " f f ' . . . t ' ' 4 ' " ?H n rs:' "A ' 'k. . . -- - .A.-. -L..., ij.i;lijil.?..wa. How does it measure up? , Our new "short beer in a bottle" is pretty small. " ' Stands only a little over 5 inches fall, even with its cap on. Contains only 7 ounces, not a drop more. Barely enough to fill a glass head and all. You'll probably chuckle the first time you see it, but when you stop to consider, this small, size is pretty handy to have around the house. It chases things. Back in the old days of the West, a lot of men felt that the only decent chaser was the "short beer." There are still a lot of Westerners who feel thisway. And smooth.light Rainier is the ideal beer to carry ., on this fine old tradition. 4 1 win '?w Something for the girls. A few gals have been over heard referring to our new 7-ounce bottle as "cute." Although we do not con done such language, we do feel that this is a very practical size for women-folk. Some gals like an occasional beer, but not too much. With our new size, no waste. And because there's less to drink, there's less chance for the last few ounces to warm up. Quenches small thirsts. There are times when a man doesn't have time to drink a full 11 or 16 ounces. There are times when he wants a small glass of beer-and that's all he wants. In both cases, the new 7-ounce bottle fills the bill. Not six, but eight. Our new size is too small for a 6-pack, so we put it up in 8-packs. Whynottryapacksoon? After you've finished it, we thinkyou'll agree that we've put a lot in that small package. In the no-deposit, no-return bottle: Rainier Beer