Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 18, 1963)
10 A WKDNESDAY, DKCEMKKK IS, lllfi.l MEUFOKD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFOKI). OREGON 2 f ffL-., vJ "sj' Thin baked pear pudding Is designed for Christmas time, to be served with an easily prepared eggnog sauce. Simply use ready prepared rggnng as (he basic sauce ingredi ent, odd cornstarch, cook and add vanilla. Baked Pear Pudding Yuletide Dessert What would the holidays he without tradition? Like the tradition of holiday desserts for instance. Desserts for this sea son are in a wonderful class all by themselves. Here is a baked pear pudding designed for Christmas time, lis special claim to fame comes from the sauce. It is extremely easy, but flavorful, sauce that uses ready-prepared eggnog as the basic ingredient. 1 his eggnog Is the same as you buy from your dairy for serving as a beverage. Its con venience for a custard-like des sert sauce would be hard to surpass. Just mix eggnog and corn starch, cook, and add vanilla. What could be more simple? If there is any left over, store it in the refrigerator for later use. Being not as distinctively Christmasy as plum pudding, the pear pudding is one you Raspberry Sauce Lends Gay Note To Baked Ham An old custom at Christmas time is the pleasure of present ing the family with a handsome baked ham lor Christmas din nor. For a gay note, serve colorful Raspberry Sauce with the slices. About 20 minutes before the end of the baking time for the ham, add your favorite glaze for glistening appearance on the platter. After the ham is sliced pass this tasty sauce to pour over the slices. Haspbcrry Sauce One package (10 ounces) froz en red raspberries; six table spoons or one-half can (six ounces) frozen lemonade con centrate or lemon juice; two teaspoons cornstarch; two ta blespoons butter or margarine. Defrost raspberries. Drain, re serving juice. Combine raspber ry juice, lemonade or lemon juice and cornstarch. Cook, stir ring constantly, until thickened and clear, about three to five minutes. Stir in raspberries and butler or margarine. Serve hot. Yield, one and one-fourth cups. Plastic Blossoms Be Immersed May will want to make again and again long after the holidays are over. It is similar to ,i small butter cake. Butter gives the pudding a pleasing, melt-in-your mouth flavor. BAKED PEAK I'UDDINO Six canned pear halves, well drained; two cups sifted flour; three teaspoons baking powder; one teaspoon salt; six table spoons butter; one cup sugar; one teaspoon lemon extract ; two eggs; threc-lourth cup milk Makes eight servings. Jewelry Made for Fishermen By United Press International Now fishy jewelry for the rod and reel set. A tackle man ufacturer created the fisher men's jewelry that ranges from $2.95 tie bars to luxurious solid gold cuff links at $!Kl. The jewelry features miniatures of spinning and bail-casling reels. On most, handles and other parts turn, (fiarcia) The first model of an experi mental dress is made of manila hemp. The very same fiber, when in rope form, is used to dock steamships throughout the world. The hemp was processed to "coltonize" il. The hemp dress, a sheath Dial bared the shoulders, was fringed at lop and bottom. Bill Atkinson, nrchilecl turned fashion designer for (lien of Michigan, unveiled coffee house logs at a fashion show in New Yolk's Grand Central Terminal. For the most part clolhes in Hie show sponsored by Hie maker of a new rnftce liqueur fea tured long pleated skirls and short shaped and straight skirts. sleeved, sleeveless and hooded fon Place drained pear halves on absorbent paper to remove all moislurc. Sift together flour, baking powder and salt. Cream buller. Add sugar and mix well. Beat in lemon extra and eggs. Arid sifted dry ingredients alternately wilh milk. Mix until well blended. Oil a one and one-half quart fluted mold well. Cut pear halves in two lengthwise and arrange around the bottom of the mold. Carefully pour hatter over pears and bake in 350 de gree preheated oven for 40 to 45 minutes. Turn out onto cake rack or plate at once. Serve with eggnog sauce. KfiGNOCi DESSERT SAUCE One cup dairy eggnog; two teaspoons cornstarch; one-half teaspoon vanilla. Mix nne (ourlh cup dairy eggnog with the cornstarch in a small sauce pan. Add the remaining eggnog and mix well. Cook, slirring constantly, over medium heat unlil sauce thickens slightly. Remove from heat and add van illa. Mix well. Chill and serve over desserts. Makes one cup. Fluffy Eggnog Dessert Sauce Wliip one-half cup whipping cream until stiff and fold into the sauce just before serving. This will make two cups of sauce. i San Franciscans I Can Rent Santa SAN FRANCISCO (DPI) A San Francisco firm that normal ly offers home repair services has announced that Ibis Christ mas il will provide a home San la Clans service. For $5, a family can rent a genuine, ho-hn-ho-ing St. Nich olas for 15 minutes on Christmas Eve. The company (llial-A-Serv) will employ US "Santa Clauses" for family rails only. "Otherwise." said Milton Kaf- lops, pleated shirts and pants and fur cardigans. All Ine lasn inns emphasized the coffee-color theme: beige, black and brown, or variations of these colors. The big three in spring shoe styles for men: contemporary, conventional and natural company president, "we Ever try to dust or hand wash plastic flowers? There's a much easier way known as "soak cleaning." Fill the bathroom washbowl nr kitchen sink with enough warm water to cover the flow ers. Immerse the flowers. Let them soak for about 15 minutes, or you may let them soak longer when you are busy. Then rinse the flowers under the faucet and see how bright and fresh look ing they are. would be flooded wilh calls from adults who were just plain lone ly." He said the proceeds will go to charily. Cheese Pennies Some pennies come from heaven. Others, children attest, come from Ibo "loittli f:iirv " shapes. The conlcmpmai y has itnL Cheese Pennies from t h e slim and narrow crescent Iocs Ras cn will make the biggest and slightly higher heels, l'he ; hit at holiday parlies. To make convennonai snape nas niouer-1 mcsc delicacies, the das Appli ate toe shaping, the natural, jmce Manufacturers Association for the collegian or post-grad, recommends creaming a stick has a medium or full brogue f butter with 1 1 pound grated toe. the hell of welled double cheddar cheese. Add 'j package soles. ,1,-v onion soun mix. S teaspoon I . , . , . salt and a cup of flour. Blend rUDIIC inVirCCI jwell. Shape into a roll about The public is inviled to atlend an inch in diameter and chill a pinochle card parly and ries- in the gas refrigeralor. Cut into serl luncheon In be given by llie i 1 1 inch thick slices anil bake Gel Together Club. Friday, De-1 in preheated gas oven al :I75 comber :'n al I p.m., in Gills 1 degrees for about 10 minutes, Community Club. ' or until brown. Meeting Held By Top-O-State Garden Clubs WEED A talk on insecti cides by Dave West and one on conservation by Mrs. William Ruddiman were given for Top-O-Slate District, California Fed eration of Garden Clubs, when the district met recently al St. Michael's Hall, Weed. Mr. West is from the Yreka office of the California Exten sion Service. Top-0 State, comprising mem bers from the four county clubs, was organized during the past year and had many organiza tional matters to settle under the leadership of Mrs. Ray Kelly district director. The new by laws were read and adopted. Each district chairman was ask ed to contact the corresponding state chairman for their duties and relay information to the in dividual club chairmen. A holiday atmosphere was crealed by he use of unique pine cone and greenery arrange ments made by the hostess club, Weed. Wreaths and arrange ments of bells done by Mrs. How ard Mulica, Yreka, were on display. Many attending had entered their holiday arrangements in .a contest lo be judged. Ribbons were given to the winners in Ihe three calagories religious, general Christmas and dried creations. "Tacky-tape" will be sold by the group as a money raising project. A potluck dinner followed the i business session, and the after noon was given over lo the speakers. The next district meeting will be in Yreka in April. latrists Talk for Group Dr. J. W. Ball and Dr. George Sakurai, local psychiatrists, spoke for the last meeting of Jackson County Medical Assist ants. The session was held at Girls Community Club. Hostesses were Mesdames Eunice Vowell, Ginger Lane and Margaret Elkins. Women Sa Too Equal In Russia By Gay Pauley id to the group which worked in 1 things from us they like. . .not I they would say, 'Ah, but your cooperation with the govern-1 doing it just because they're I New York!'" mcnt's television committee. It was her first visit to her par ents' homeland. "There are lots of Western in Western.' "They know much about Americans," she said, "and want to know more. Almost al- fluences," she said. 'Like pale ways, the Russian women want lipsick and wearing eye pencil ed lo ask questions of us. and hats among the babushkas. I "If I said Uiat I admired the "But I think they're selecting I beauty of one part of Mscow, Charcoal Portraits $6.00 L. HARRELL For Appointments 899-1606 Psychi NEW YORK (UPI)-The So vie woman rales TOO equally wilh the man and is waking In some of the disadvantages of the fact. This was one of the impres sions Mari Janofsky said she got from a month's tour of Rus sia as the only woman member of a U.S. television team pre paring a documentary account of the life of the Soviet woman. "I would not want to be a woman in Russia today," said Miss Janofsky in an interview. "The kind of equality she has I don't want. . .she's had to sac rifice femininity. Brawny Beauties "II would be doublful if a 2.1-year-old crane operator we talked with would he treated as a Southern belle. . ." Miss Janofsky, whose parents migrated from Russia in 18011 and settled in Towando, Pa., ex plained that the official equality of sexes came with the Russian Revolution 46 years ago. She said "equality" today means that the Russian house wife who works and most mothers do work to augment the family income leaves the house in the morning when her husband does. She drops the children off at a day nursery, works all day, picks up the children at the end of Ihe day, and does the mar keting. The Russian way of life does not expect the man to help at home, she said. "That," said Miss Janofsky, "is equality with a vengeance. "But I got the impression the Russian women are waking up to the advantages of being fe male. . ." Certainly, she said, the awakening shows in things fem inine such as lipstick, nail pol ish, eye makeup and in getting some color and style into cloth ing instead of settling for drab utility. It shows in the fact that the daily hour and one-half fashion shows staged at GUM, Ihe big Moscow department store, always are jammed, she said. The government is aware of Ihe Soviet women's demand for feminine fripperies and is re sponding, she continued. Noth ing is made and sold in the So viet unless it's approved offi cially. That's why such items as uplift bras, nylon stockings and perfume at popular prices are meaningful, she said. Miss Janofsky worked as as sociate producer on the televi sion show, "The Soviet Wom an," presented recently by Phil en on ABC-Television. She, producer Bill Weston, and a camera crew visited Mscow and Tbilisi and Batumi in the Georgian province to film women at home, in the market, on the job. The women included teachers, dentists, ar chitects, doctors, the woman as tronomer who heads the Rus sian spare satellite tracking system, ballerinas, bricklayers, barbers, mail women, janitors, bus drivers, assembly line workers. They also talked wilh Rus sia's first lady, Mme. Nina Khrushchev, and wilh Eka terina Furtseva, the only wom an in the Russian Presidium. "The things I'm saying are only my impressions," said Miss Janofsky. "I hate these people who become authorities on a country after one brief visit." First Visit Miss Janofsky said her knowledge of Russian, learned first as a child growing up and in formal language study in lat er years, was highly valuable DECORATE THEIR INTERIORS FOR CHRISTMAS Me $vuy qmcI J&cuoid 'uHuj JfSj& F,NE FOODS AND GIFTS J) Farm-Fresh and Home-Made Fresh Fruit ersn'c''y Pastries tjAwmJ Preserves and Syrups T5Es2lii Smokehouse Specials i W I I " Creamy Confections I Ts FtBsPT -V w-H Chummy Cheeses Ji 1 1 1 1 1 IvStV "r? W'll stnd your gifts ifi I Hill VT for you ... or slop by, Jf. j ill! I V-otjMcif pick 'em up ond tok j - "lem ''0m rm - -- fesra SliJQafers for Ijristnias fivii) FOB YOUR LAST MINUTE J 9 SHOP ALL 3 FLOORS at V? J V" ?.VWIV rTTTT. Ft. H 1.1 .';. MEDFORD. OREGON GIFTS FOR EVERYONE! OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 9 INCLUDING SATURDAY, DEC. 21 "Th Store of Thousand Thoughtful Gifts'' 1 it-h- t EMBRODERED Sk W 4 CARDIGAN AlkV? , . 1795 vJvvi .1 mmi uMffc war' " ' 1498 RIB KNIT PULLOVER i i If .she collects Kiwtcrs (name one girl zvho does Vj . . r. p 1 1' no it nrr -rrrn n Kntt Italian hand-knit in the cuddliest yarns imaginable! V I jd JACQUARE MlMAl t iA KNIT fMl f "mm if ?lf'... '. Cerfifictc! VflV MOHAIR CHEVRON STITCH CARDIGAN 1498 SHOP EVERY NIGHT INCLUDING SATURDAY 'TIL 4 "22