16 A
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, IKS
Feeding the Family
ZOLITA
Food
'Kound-the-World
Recipe of Week
Ordinarily we give you one
"round-the-world" recipe. Thii
week we bring you two since
one uses egg whites and tne out
er egg yolks. . .and. in a sense.
this should simplify matters for
the cook who wants to know
what to do with left-over yolks
or whites.
Pavlova; Meringue
Filled with Frail
New Zealand, a membtr of
the British Commonwealth of
Nations, consists of two main
islands and a number of smaller
outlying islands so scattered
that they range from the tropi
cal to the antarctic. However
the population agrees that Pav
lova is one of their favorite des
serts, according to delegates to
the United Nations.
Heat oven to 250 degrees.
slow. Beat six egg whites and
one teaspoon vinegar until
frothy. Beat in three-fourths cup
sugar gradually until mixture is
stiff and glossy.' Add one tea
spoon vanilla. Line nine-inch
layer pan with waxed paper
which has been dampened with
water. Pour in egg white mix
ture, pulling paper up slightly at
tne edges. Bane one nour until
meringue is a rich cream color
and firm but not hard, ttemove
from pan when cool. Place on
serving dish and cover thickly
with whipped cream and sliced
DineaupJe or other fruit. Makes
six to eight servings. '
Flan A la Philippines
Flan bv anv other name Is
still custard. This is the way
they do it in the Philippines as
a Caramel Custard.
. Scald one quart coffee cream
or half-and-half in top of double
boiler. Beat 12 egg yolks and
five tablespoons sugar together;
pour cream very slowly over
egg mixture, stirring constantly.
Add grated rind of one-half lime
and juice of one lime. Carmel
ize one cup sugar. With the car
melizcd sirup thickly coat the
sides and bottom of a two-quart
.baking dish. Pour in the cream
mixture. Set baking dish in pan
of hot water. Bake in moderate,
,150-degree, oven about one hour,
or until knife inserted in center
comes out clean. Serve very
cold. Makes 8 to 10 servings.
Vine-Ripcncd Tomatoes
Tops for Broiling
- Tomatoes, red, ripe, luscious
and fresh from late summer
vines add bright color, tempting
flavor and important vitamin
values to meals. They re pouring
Into markets from major western-
crowing areas which ex
plains their fine quality, lower
cost.
Plan on' four servings from
one pound of tomatoes; this usu
ally means two large tomatoes,
three medium-size or four small
Ones. . .
Open Face Broil
The bigger, firm-fleshed to
matoes are choice eating when
halved and broiled in a variety
of ways. ! '
For serving as a vegetable,
simply halve tomatoes, top with
buttered, seasoned bread
crumbs and broil 10 minutes or
so. i '
For satisfying lunch of supper
main dishes', these two ways are
perhaps "tops."
Spread toasted bread or ham
burger bun halves with mayon
naise or butter. Ton with gener
ous-sized tomato halves; salt
and pepper lavishly. Arrange
slices ot cheese on tomato
halves; then criss-cross each
with bacon half-slices. Broil un
til bacon curls, cheese melts, to
mato cooks.
Butter or mayonnaise toast
slices or hamburger bun halves.
Spread generously with canned
deviled ham. Top with thick to
mato slices. Combine two table
spoons or so of melted butter
with salt, freshly ground black
pepper, one-fourth teaspoon cur
ry powder; brush over tomaio
slices. Broil live minutes or un
til tomatoes are lightly browned.
French Fried Onions
We repeat this recipe because
men like French-fried onions
and we read someplace that
women cook what men like.
Make them ahead of time for a
quick re-heating.
For eight servings (he'll eal
four of them), cut four large
onions in slices one-fourth inch
thick; separate into rings. Dip
in flour then into evaiwralcd
milk (about two-thirds cup
should do it), Ihcn in flour
again. Drop into deep hot fat,
375 degrees and fry until golden
brown. Drain on absorbent pa
H 50
FREE GOLD
8
lfc. fij
With tach Ordr Im On
400 Cu. Ft. Laid Gutn Li Inii
$19.00
Delivtrtd inywhtrt In M4tof
VALLEY FUEL CO.
Wilt McAndrtwi
Coupon food III!
mm
llllll
VINCENT
Editor
per; sprinkle with salt. Serve
hot.
Parents Urged to Check
School Lunch Programs
Before proceeding today with
listing the best buys of the week
we remind parents of the wis
dom of knowing first-hand just
how the National School Lunch
Program and the Special Milk
Program operate In this area.
Visit the school or schools at
tended by your children and
those in charge will be glad to
tell you about it.
Both programs are adminis
tered by the U. S. Department
01 Agriculture in cooperation
with Boards of Education, state
and local agencies. They are de
signed "to help guard the diets
and health of children during
their important growing years
and to "use dairy surpluses to
maximum advantage" accord
ing to an Act of Congress.
More than half the nation's
school children are now drinking
milk at schools it considerably
less than home costs ... as a
result of these programs which
are available to all school-goers
Local Plentiful!
Topping the list of plentiful,
we Una Drouer-iryers ana iur-
kevs as usual. There are many
eood beef cuts for long slow
cooking, lamb cuts other than
fancy chops. Freshly ground
beef suggests a thousand ways
with hamburgers, for making
meat loafs, for meat balls and
for satisfying spaghetti sauces.
Fish and shellllsn otterings in
clude cod, fish sticks, flounder,
sole, halibut, rockfish, salmon,
scallops, shrimp. Remember the
lemons.
Vegetable buys include car
rots,' cucumbers, eggplant, let
tuce varieties, onions, green
peppers, potatoes, squash vari
eties, spinach, bunched vegeta
bles. Tomatoes of fine quality
are rolling in from our biggest
producing areas. New season
artichokes, broccoli and cauli
flower are increasing in supply.
Corn-on-the-cob season is still
with us.
Fruit displays offer superb
Washinaton State apples, both
Jonathans and Delicious. There
are Tokay, Thompson Seedless
and Ribier grapes. Casaba,
Cranshaw, honeydew, Persian
and watermelons are available
for the choosing. There are also
avocados, bananas, lemons, or
anges, limes, nectarines, peach
es and plums.
Enrollments at
Colleges Higher
EUGENE UPI Enrollments
at Oregon's nine higher educa
tion campuses Monday totaled
32,390, up 1,713 over the 31,
217 enrolled at this time last
year.
Officials said an additional
400 or 500 students are expected
by the end of this week.
All Bui uregon i-ouege oi
Education and Eastern Oregon
College reported enrollment in
creases. OCE had 1,319 com
pared to last year's 1,393, and
EOC had 1,111 compared to
1,125.
Oregon State University
topped the list with 10,291, com
pared to 9,866. University of
Oregon had 9,560 compared to
9,348.
Portland State had 6,564 com
pared to 5,744, Southern Oregon
Collece 2.044 compared to 1,792,
Medical School 651 compared to
691, Dental School 384 compared
to 356, and Oregon Technical
Institute 906, up four from last
year's 902.
Officials said registrations
were up 5.6 per cent over last
year. They said a 6.2 per cent
increase had been anticipated
Jaycees To Speak
At Local Meeting
Members of the Medford Jun
ior Chamber of Commerce will
speak at the Tuesday, Oct. 8,
meeting of the Jackson County
Association for Retarded Chil
dren. The meeting will be at the
Rehabilitation Center for the
Blind, 248 East Stewart ave., at
7:30 o'clock.
The Jaycee members will tell
about their project to help the
mentally retarded In Jackson
county.
CLIP
THIS
COUPON
mmmmmm
BOND STAMPS
Ph. 77 J. 1 174
Oct. 11, 141
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NAZI SALUTE Neo-Nazi Colin Jordan, lead
er of Britain's National Socialist Party, gives
a Nazi salute and Francoise Dior, niece of
the late French fashion designer Christian Dior,
has a haughty look as they leave the registry
Status of Congressional Bills
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Status
of major legislation
Income Taxes Administra
tion-supported bill would reduce
income taxes on individual and
corporations by $11 billion with
$7 billion of relief effective on
1964 incomes and rest taking
effect in 1965. House Passed.
Senate Finance committee
studying bill at closed door
briefings; hearings later.
Stocks and Bond Taxes To
retard flow of American capital
abroad, Kennedy has proposed
that purchase taxes be levied
on Americans who buy foreign
stocks and bonds from foreign
ers. House Ways and Means
committee concluded hearings.
Senate Awaiting House ac
tion. Fallout Shelters President
Kennedy wants authority to
make federal contributions to
ward construction of civil de
fense fallout shelters in schools,
hospitals and other non-profit
Institutions. House Passed
one year, $190 minion bill, ben-
ate Nothing scheduled.
Foreign Aid Administration
asking $4.5 billion. House Pass
ed authorization bill setting ap
propriations ceiling of $3.5 bil
lion. Senate Foreign Rela
tions committee has partly com
pleted action on bill. (Actual
appropriations to come later.)
Health Insurance President
wants hospitalization program
for persons 65 and older fi
nanced through social security
taxes. House Ways and Means
committee expected to hold
hearings this fall but no chance
for passage this year. Senate
awaiting House action.
Mental Health Administra
tion wants long-range program
for community mental health
treatment centers; research on
and treatment of mental retard
ation. House and Senate have
passed sharply differing version.
Compromise between Senate IP
year, $847 million program and
Houses $238 million program
expected to be worked out in
House-Senate comerence.
Colleges President asked for
new aid program to build class
rooms, libraries and laborator
ies. House Passed $1.2 billion
Loan and Grant bill. Senate
Committee approved differing
version of same proposal.
Vocational Education Ken
nedy sought Increase in current
federal aid of $57 million for job
Macmillan Party
Slates Conference
LONDON ( UPI ) Prime Min
ister Harold Macmillan, faced
with new resignation demands
from within his own party
ranks, has begun a crucial week
of political activity.
Macmillan's Conservative par
ty will open its annual confer
ence Wednesday at the seaside
resort of Blackpool. It will be
the last such meeting before the
general elections Macmillan
must call wilhin the next 12
months, and the Conservatives
must use it to recapture the
Initiative from the opposition
Labor party.
Labor wound up its conven
tion last week with a rare show
of unity between left and right
wings, a series oi atiacus on
Macmillan for permitting large
scale unemployment and t h e
sex and security scandals, and
a sweeping program of social
reform. -
Opinion polls have been show
ing a Labor lead over the Con
servatives for many weeks.
Medford Man Named
Heat Institute Officer
i PORTLAND (UPI) - t- J.
Rockwell of Portland has been
elected president of the Oil Heat
Institute of Oregon at the
group's annual meeting here.
Also elected were R. I..
Brown of Medford as vice presi
dent, Joe B. Young of Hood Riv
er as secretary and L. E. Nesch
k of Portland as treasurer.
Mi -4 - I - i .&
J4hf ' 1 1 I 0 rV I
mtn i ml M .mmmJimiihmA
training schools. House-Passed
bill that would boost aid to $237
million a year. Senate Commit
tee approved boost to $243 mil
lion, added extension and en
largement of National Defense
Education act; three-year exten
sion of "impacted areas" school
aid.
Libraries President wants
construction and operating aid
for city as well as county li
braries. House Committee ap
proved. Senate Committee ap
proved. Package Bill Kennedy wants
new safeguards for Negro voting
rights, ban on customer discrim
ination by private businesses.
justice department authority to
start school desegregation suits.
White House authority to cut off
Federal aid to discriminatory
programs, creation of federal
agencies to fight government
related job bias and help medi
ate local race disputes and con
tinuation of Civil Rights com
mission. House Judiciary sub
committee approved strengthen
ed version of Kennedy bill, in
cluding tougher public accom
modations, Fair Employment
Practices Commission covering
most jobs, blanket authority for
Justice department to act in
Civil Rights cases. Senate Ju
diciary committee hearings on
package bill in recess, no action
expected. .
Public Accommodations Ken
nedy's proposal to ban discrimi
nation in use of hotels, restau
rants, theaters, stores and other
public accommodations. House-
Strengthened version included in
omnibus bill. Senate Commerce
committee may act on this to
day as separate legislation. -
Emplyoment Discrimination
Russian Space
Couple To Wed
: MOSCOW (UPI) - Moscow
buzzed today with reports that
Soviet cosmonaut Andrian Niko
layev and pioneer space-woman
Valentina Tercshkova will mar
ry. Well-informed sources said the
dimpled, 26-year-old Valentina
will wed the handsome, 33-year-old
"most eligible Soviet bache
lor" early this winter.
Russians have been calling
them "the star crossed lovers"
for months.
There was no formal an
nouncement. But reports of the
engagement came from Mos
cows' suburban "space town,"
the community of Soviet cos
monauts. The romance was no surprise.
Even as Miss Tercshkova was
orbiting the earth to become the
world's first woman in space
last June, there were reports
that there was more than pro
fessional comradeship in her
friendship with Nikolayev, who
had joined Pavel Popovich in
the first joint flight of two space
ships the previous August.
Valentina now is on a tour of
Cuba. Nikolayev Is living at the
space town.
Art Workshop
Schedule Listed
PHOENIX The first meet
ing of the first session of an
art workshop for Phoenix-Talent
school district was held last
evening, according to school
district officials.
The workshop, for teachers of
grades one through six, will be
directed by Dr. James Doerter,
head of the art department at !
Southern Oregon college.
The first session meetings
are Oct. 7 ana uct. 14 at 7
o'clock at the Phoenix elemen
tary school for teachers in
grades one through three from
both the Phoenix and Talent ele
mentary schools.
The second session will be
held Oct. 21 and 28 at 7 p.m.
at the Talent elementary school
for teachers of grades four
through six of both schools.
MEDKORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEOFORD. OREGON
office in Coventry, England, after marrying.
An angry crowd of about 1,000 pelted Jordan,
40, and his bride, 31, with rotten eggs, stink
bombs and clods of dirt. (UPI)
Kennedy e n d o rs e d separate
FEPC covering private business
and labor unions. House Labor
committee approved separate
bill; Judiciary subcommittee
include it in omnibus bill. Sen
ateLabor subcommittee tenta
tively approved; commerce
committee put labor union bias
ban into public accommodations
bill..
Civil Rights Commission Ken
nedy asked for four-year exten
sion in omnibus bill. Senate
Has approved one-year exten
sion. Price-CuttIng Administra
tion - opposed bill backed by
druggists and some other re
tail groups is designed to stop
retail price - cutting of brand
name merchandise. House
Commerce committee approved
pending before rules committee.
senate Commerce subcom
mittee will resume hearings
Wednesday.
Awaiting Signature:
Railroad Payroll Taxes Con
gress approved legislation re
quiring larger employer and
employee contribution to. rail
road retirement fund increased
employer contributions only to
rauroaa unemployment insur
ance fund to avert long-range
shortage.
Enacted:
Military Pay President ask
ed $1.2 billion annual pay boost
lor .servicemen, reservists and
retirees. Congress approved $1.2
billion increase - with some
changes including elimination
of boosts for low-ranking en
listed men with less-than two
years service. ,
Draft Congress' granted
Kennedy's request for four-year
extension of selective service
and doctor draft. '
Feed Grains Congress ex
tended for two years temporary
program ,of paying farmers to
hold down surplus production of
corn and other feed grains.
Silver To combat shortage
of ; silver for coins, Congress
gave administration authority
it requested to replace existing
silver backed $1 bills with
gold-backed bills. - .
Women Workers Starting
next June employers must pro
vide equal pay for women work
ers who do the same work as
men; new law applies to jobs
covered by minimum wage
hour law.
Taxes Congress in response
to administration request ex
tended for another year present
temporary tax rates on corpo
ration profits, liquor, cigarettes,
automobiles, telephone calls and
airline tickets which had been
scheduled to drop to lower lev
els July I. (Corporation tax
rates would be permanently re
vised downward, if Knnedy's
tax - reduction program is en
acted.) National Debt Limit Con
gress granted president's re
quest to extend through Nov.
30 temporary ceiling of $309 bil
lion on national debt. Ceiling
would have reverted to $285
billion Sept. I without the new
legislation. Current debt about
$20 billion above that figure.
Rail Dispute Congress au
thorized creation of seven-man
board to arbitrate two key work
rules issues, thus averting na
tionwide strike. Award to re
main in effect for two years,
other issues not subject to ar
bitration but strike over them
barred for at least 180 days.
Medical Schools Congress
granted Kennedy's request for
federal aid for construction of
medical-dental schools and loan
aid to medical and dental stu
dents. Three year program
would cost about $236 million.
BRILL
METAL WORKS
Commtrcial- Industrial
lUildiotUI Sato Mttil Work
Jttlalau, GaUinlitd
nd Coar FikricMio '
2287 Wisl Mail
PHONI TT 1-4440
Jacksonville
Gun, Stagecoach Whips
JACKSONVILLE-A gun and
collection of stagecoach whips
were donated to the Jacksonville
museum during September by
uoraon Burnett, Myrtle creek.
Burnett- is a son of Tom Bur
nett, early stage driver on the
Roseburg to Redding run of the
Oregon California Stage line.
The gun, -a sawed-off shotgun,
was carried by the guard who
rode the stagecoach with Bur
nett. One of the whips was car
ried by veteran driver Al Beard
when he1 brought President
Rutherford B. Hayes through
soutnern uregon in 1880.
Other gifts and loans present
ed to the museum included
china from Miss Mabel E.
Mears, an old permanent wav
ing machine from Mr. and Mrs.
Tokyo Fisheries
Talks Recessed
TOKYO (UPI) - The North
Pacific fisheries talks between
the United States. Canada and
Japan have been adjourned un
til next spring, after three
weeks of fruitless negotiation. -
The breakoff was announced
in an official' communique fol
lowing the 14th and last meeting
of the negotiators at the Foreign
Ministry here. .
The communique, worded in
diplomatic niceties, said "The
three delegations deemed it dif
ficult at this meeting to come to
complete agreement and con
cluded that it would be desirable
to give further study to means of
resolving the remaining differ
ences in the views of the three
countries . . :"
Actually what happened dur
ing the closed door meetings,
according to well informed
sources, was that the Japanese
told the United States and Cana
da that they- would abrogate the
current North Pacific fisheries
treaties unless scientific prin
ciples of fish conservation were
established as the basis for fish
ing rights in the area.
Catholic Press Plans
Northwest Conference
MOUNT ANGEL (UPI)-The
Catholic Press Association will
hold its Pacific Northwest re
gional convention at the Mount
Angel Abbey Oct. 22-23.
Delegates from uregon,
Washington, Montana, Idaho
and British Columbia will at
tend. 1 '
lliey'rc here now- the all-new Falcons for 1964!
We've kept the economy that made Falcon famous.
(Falcon's Six still holds the all-time Mobil Economy
; Run record for Sixes or Eights.)
: But we've changed every tiling else.
New style, new comfort, new convenience
and the plushest ride a compact ever had.
; . : Come test-drive the '64 Falcon soon!
Flcon Futwra Hardiof
FACTS ON THE 1964 FALCON: Redesigned inierior lor gre.icr comfort and conxenience
ford'j hmouj Twice a Yer Maintenance More safeguards against rust and corrosion than ever before
Optional power steering, power brakes Bucket seat models axailable Optional air conditioning
Fire engine choices from ihrilu 85 hp Six to 164-hp l Four transmissions including America's only
tuU) symhroniied J speed manual (standaid with V-8 s) f ourteen models plus three extra-duty wagoni
Crater Lake Motors
- Medford 6th and Fir
Ford presents "Arrest and Trial"-ABC TV Network-Check our local listing? tor time anj&jjiannel
Museum Gets
Victor Peterson; Jackson
County Parent Teacher associa
tion records and scrapbooks
from Mrs. W. R. Glass; pic
tures, quilt tops and other sew
ing handwork from Mrs. Earl
M. Miller; an 1830 map of the
United States from Mrs. B. G.
Harding; an old barber chair
on rockers from Herman Kusel,
all of Medford.
A large collection of articles
including paintings, photo
graphs, records, books, news
papers, scales, clocks, magic
lantern, stool, Chinese chest and
much early medical and dental
equipment was presented by
Bert C. Rostel, who came to
Jacksonville in 1876 and en
gaged in various businesses in
this city, and in Central Point
and Medford.
Brass Hinge
A Chinese ornamental brass
hinge found on the Jacksonville
school grounds was contributed
by Miss Betty Lee Boyle, Klam
ath Falls. A photograph was
presented by Mrs. A. J. Mc
Callen, Portland, a shell clock
by C. E. Moyer, Winston, and a
piece of China by Mrs. Donald
J. Russell, . San Francisco,
Calif. . '
.. Museum attendance for Sep
tember was 6,070. This is an in
crease of 975 over September,
1962 and by far the .highest at
tendance for any September
since the museum opened, ac
cording to the curator, Miss
Mary Hanley. Highest attend
ance for any single day was
917 on Sunday, Sept. 1.
Attendance since July 10,
1950 to Oct. 1, 1963 was 564,981
and attendance since Jan. 1,
1963 was 55,653.
Guests Registered
During the past month, guests
have registered from 44 states,
Washington DC, and the
countries of Canada, Mexico,
Cuba, England, Holland, Bel
gium, Germany, South Africa,
Guam and Japan. Groups who
toured the museum were the
science club of the seventh
grade, Rogue River school;
members of the Oregon Prac
tical Nurses association and the
Oregon Veterinary Medical As
sociation auxiliary, Church of
the Nazarene Junior Boys,
Grants Pass; Snappy Cooks 4-H
club, Central Point, and Boy
Scout Troop 41, Medford. Also
visiting were members of the
Porsche Club of America, Pa
cific region, Eugene, and 41
members of the Embry Travel
Tour from Oakland, Calif.
"PfS'"''
;BV T3ICK WC5T
Congressional
Language Barrier
WASHINGTON (UPI)-When
administration officials appear
before congressional commit
tees to seek funds for the for
eign aid program, they almost
always encounter a certain
amount of hostility. '
Why do they have so much
trouble getting - their . points
across to the Congress? . I be
lieve the lack of understanding
is caused by a language barrier.
If the witnesses spoke Hausa
and the committee members
spoke Urdu, they could call in
some interpreters and get along
very well. But as things now
stand, they both speak English.
Speaking the same language
can seriously impair communi
cation, as we shall see as we
examine , a volume of testimo
ny published today by the House
subcommittee on foreign aid Ap
propriations. -
As we tune in on the hear
ing, subcommittee Chairman
Otto E. Passman (D-La.) and
Rep. William E.. Minshall (R
Ohio) are interrogating Brig.
Gen. Stephen O. Fuqua Jr. about
the purchase of some airplanes
for the military assistance pro
gram. Passman: How many Cessna
185 aircraft did you request last
year in the 1963 budget for
Iran?
Fuga: None.
Passman: We want to keep
the horse ahead of the cart this
time. Let us see what you
requested.
Fuqua: There were no 185s;
there were 15 180s requested
last year.
Minshall: How much did you
pay per airplane?
REA Would Close
Office at Yamhill
SALEM (UPI) - Railway Ex
press Agency has applied to the
state public utility commission
er for authority to withdraw its
agency from Yamhill.
Railway Express told the PUC
it wanted to handle its Yamhill
business through its agency at
Newberg, 12 miles to the east.
A hearing on the request has
been scheduled for 2 p.m. Oct.
25, in the Yamhill city hall.
Fuqua: Cessna 185s cost $18,
000. Minshall: How much did you
pay for the 180s?
Fuqua: We did not buy any
180s.
Minshall: You just said 180.
Fuqua: As I pointed out just
a moment ago, when the pro
gram was adjusted, there were
no Cessna 180s left in the fis
cal year 1963 program as of
March 19. We did not put any
in. We did purchase Cessna
185s. . ..
Passman:' How many Cessna
185 aircraft did you request last
year in the 1963 budget?
Fuqua: None. But we did ask
for 15 Cessna 180s.
Passman: I am will for you
to substitute one for the other.
Fuqua: We asked for no 185s.
We requested funds for 15 180s.
Passman: How many did you
program? .,-
Fuqua: We purchased no 180s
in fiscal year 1963, but we did
purchase Cessna 185s. . .
There was a lot more of this
sort of thing, but let us merci
fully draw the curtain at this
point. Swahili, anyone? '.
Bob Anderson
Is Now Associated
With the
MUSIC CENTER
Arcade Bldg., 126 E. Main
THY TOTAL PERFORMANCE
TOR A CHANGE!
FORD
Falcon Fairlaoe ford Thunder bird
untrcmBut