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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1941)
PAGE SIX M RULES MADE J ON JOB BENEFITS SALEM, June 13 Workers not fully employed and who am less than SIS a week ahould consult their nearest era- oloyment office to learn of rllhts under new benefit regu lations In effect June 14, ac cording to Silas Gaiser, adminis trator for the state unemploy ment compensation commission. "Claimants hereafter will serve only two waiting weeks and draw a minimum of $10 a week," explained Mr. Gaiser, "new payments are based on 6 par cent of the high quarter amines. "With weekly allowances be ing increased, many additional workers become eligible for par tial benefits if not fully employ- ad. Personnel in our 25 employ ment offices have complete in structions as to new proce dures." Of the 31,230 claimants who have drawn none or part of their benefits, only 1790 actu ally were paid unemployment Insurance last week. Of those who might draw higher benefits under the new schedule, 15,501 have received no money to date and 15,749 have had at least one week's check. In addition maximum benefits of $754,673 have been paid to 7582 unem ployed. Payments for the first five months of 1941 have totalled $1,612,786 as compared with $2,529,512 for the same period last year. Total benefits for 1840 wera $4,099,925. Highway Commission Awards Road Bids . PORTLAND, June 13 VP) The state highway commission awarded contracts totaling more than $250,000 yesterday and re ferred to the engineer with pow er to act a $313,317 bid on im proving the Sexton mountain section of the Pacific highway between Roseburg and Grants Pass. A lone bid on Morrison street bridge approaches in Portland was rejected as were all bids on grading and surfacing on the Warner secondary highway in Lake county. The Sexton mountain bid of Trans: Penepacker, Portland, for grading 4-7 miles In Josephine county on the Grave creek Jump Off Joe creek section of the Pacific highway, was refer red. Awards were made to all oth er low bidders. Under normal conditions, tigers make kills only about once in every four nights. You Every bowl of crisp, delldons Albers Corn Hakes now brings your family Vitamin Bi.- Here's why this is important news: Everyone needs Vitamin Bi every day! It helps turn carbo hydrates Into energy for work and play. It if necessary for normal function of the nerves, for good appetite and digestion. Your children need it to grow and develop ss they should. As yon probably know, an alarming propor tion of American diets do not provide enough Vitamin Bi. So you'll be glad to learn you mow give your family Vitamin Bt every time aaaar BtiaJ Aen onuWeUHv E X T A A V A L U E COUPON Prepare 'He-Man Special Father s Day Treat . Baspberry gelatin with pineapple Give Dad what he likes best on Father's day. If the women of the family put their heads to gether and work together, they can delight father with a regu lar he-man banquet You'll find that the following menu will be just what he likes best: Broiled steak with fried onions, French fried potatoes, sweet garden peas, celery and radishes, old-fashioned straw berry short cake, and coffee. If the smaller members of the family want to make the dessert for Father's day, select a simple gelatin dessert which is easy for them to prepare. This I run mix ture is colorful and delicious, and will make dad proud of his little cooks: MENU BREAKFAST Blackber ries, dry whole-wheat cereal, jelly omelet, toast, coffee, milk. FATHER'S DAY DINNER Tomato juice, broiled steak, fried onions, French fried po tatoes, new peas in cream, radishes, celery, old-fashioned Maryland short cake, coffee, milk. SUPPER Cold cuts, mix ed vegetable salad, hot rolls, relish, jam, apple pie, cheese, tea. milk. TRADITIONAL OLD -TIME MARYLAND STRAWBERRY : SHORT CAKE "No sweetened cake it's short-bread so short it melts in your mouth, served piping hot, well buttered, with layers of Vitamin aijazgets THE Vittles' for slices and whole raspberries. chilled berries. Here's how: "Cap and wash 11 quarts of strawberries. Sugar to taste and mash. Put in refrigerator to chill. Sift together two cups of flour, five teaspoons of baking powder, and one teaspoon of salt. Cut in eight slightly round ed tablespoons of shortening until it is about the size of small peas. Add half a cup of milk; stir in with a fork. Pat out into six wide, thin biscuits and bake about 15 minutes in a 450' F. oven. Cut biscuits apart with a fork and butter inside and top. Pour on berries, making two layers, and serve at once. RASPBERRY and PINEAPPLE SUPREME (Serves 4 to 6) One package raspberry-flavor ed gelatin, 1 pint hot water, 1 cup raspberries, 3 or 4 slices of pineapple, cut in halves. Dissolve gelatin in hot water. Turn Into mold. Chill until firm. Unmold. Arrange pineapple halves around mold. Garnish with raspberries and whipped cream, if desired. However, if possible make this old-fashioned strawberry short cake made famous at the Eastern Shore of Maryland an nual strawberry festival. The recipe is given by Mrs. Oscar L. Morris, of Salisbury, Md., a noted hostess. FAST ELEVATORS Elevators In the R.C-A. build ing, at Rockefeller Center, New York City, travel at a speed of 1400 feet a minute; the 860-foot trip requiring little more than 37 seconds. i Corn Flakes Bi Now yon pour those big golden Albers Corn Flakes into a cereal bowl. Because they are made in the West, Albers Corn Flakes always reach you crispi-Jresh. That meant corn flakes at their best! So you'll surely want to serve Albers Corn Flakes often. They save you money, tool Just compart the cost per ounce with other ready-to-eat cereals aod see bow thrifty Albert Corn Flakes are. Try them tnd see how good they taste! Why not give your family the benefits of new Vitamin Bi enriched Albers Corn Flakes? Get several packages at your gcoctt't today! - mn VITAMIN IN IV e' R Y NEWS AND THE HERALD. DRELL SELECTED RED HAT TRIER SALEM, (Special) Bernle nll nt Unftlnnri whfl urflf l-v cently appointed Red Hnt train ing director Dy oiaie roresicr Nelson S. Rogers, began his pro gram this week with the cooper ative forest fire organization by Instruction In forest fire control methods. The Red Hats, open to unem ployed youth between the ages of 17 and 24, are located six miles northwest of Corvallls. Co operating in the fire control or ganization are the National Youth administration, state and federal forest agencies and the Oregon State college school of forestry. Enrollees are paid $30 a month by the NYA and in ad dition receive 45 cents an hour while on the "front" fighting fire. The basic Idea of the program Involves fire training In all its phases, development of Judg ment and leadership and a rec reational program designed to develop the wise use of leisure time in order to make the indlv idual a better citizen for having served with the Red Hats, Orell said. In brief, the four hour daily training period includes the mas tering of the progressive method of control while on the fire line, radio and telephone communica tions study, forest fire detection and physical conditioning by hiking and calisthentlcs. Train ing Is now concentrated around the progressive fire line control so that crews will be ready for immediate fire call. Orell, who received his mas HasrM in forestry this year. has had four year's experience with the uniiea suites imoi service. He also has a high ui uachftT1. certificate and has given class Instruction at the Oregon state college kiwu, w. forestry. Bright Student Must Choose One Of Three Offers SEATTLE, June 3 (UP) This business of being bright in school has its troubles too, Frederick A. Olafson, 16, found out today. Olafson finished high school in three years, graduating last night as valedictorian. But he is faced with the problem of choosing one of three schol arships to reputable schools offered him. Yale, Harvard and Reed col lege have all offered him scholarships. Harvard seems to have the inside track, he said. Bring . . . B, ENRICHED P A C K A G E KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON U. S. Housewives Today Must Be Good Budget Managers By MRS. OAYNOR MADDOX NEA Service Staff Writer A nation is no stronger than Its families, and no family la stronger than its Individual members. That l why America today must educate every home maker to be a first-rate manager of her food budget. What does It take to be a good managcrT "First of all," says Doctor Hazel Sttobeling, of the Bureau of Home Economics, "It takes a knowledge of the foods the family needs. A good manager finds 15 cents a person per meal ample allowance for food, enough to buy a diet that is gen erously adequate and to allow for considerable variety in food choices. WHAT 15c WILL BUY "Spent wisely, 15 cents a per. son a meal (45c a day or $3.13 a person each week) will buy: one quart of milk for every child in the family and a pint for every adult every day; four or five servings of vegetables and fruits daily for everyone; four or five eggs a week for children, two or three for adults, and some more for cooking; meat, fish, or poul try about five times a week; a daily cereal dish; bread and but ter at every meal; and dessert at least once a day. "Actually, the difference be tween good diets and poor diets is in the amounts of the 'protec tive' foods milk, eggs, green leafy vegetables, and vitamin C-rich fruits and vegetables included in each type of diet Some forms of foods furnish pro tective vitamins and minerals more cheaply than others. When prices or prejudices make It necessary to cut down on one type of protective food, the wise APRICADE 9c S mJ1 a (y,um,st,0)..1i. it? JUICE 9c CARROT JUICE 10c iviuaM a, at, e, at it at. GRAPE JUICE (Na Sutar ASM 31c Quart GRAPEFRUIT JUICE cvitamm ei, e, e . 25c r w. ORANGE JUICE 34c (viuMnt a, ai, e, m a PINEAPPLE JUICE (Viiimm at, e, ot 32c at. SW VEGETABLES VEGETABLE SALAD, J7) A IW. VHH WHOLE KERNEL CORN, 2 No 2 cons MEDIUM PEAS, 2 No 2 cons JULIENNE BEETS, 2 No. 2 cant TiiA. Pot Kg?" ' Short w" Grouno i n.ann SliceaHEAM CRATER VhftfiSe 1 Cottag r-H D...l4rv and .(REAMED HONEY SPREADS LIKE BUTTER DELICIOUS ON TOAS T manager safeguards diets by using more of others. STUDY PRICES CLOSELY "A good manager, working on a limited budget, capitalizes on the fact that there Isn't always a close relationship between price and food value. Whole grain cereals cooked at home can take the place of ready-to-eat kinds. The less tender cuts of meat are as nutritious as choice steaks and chops. For many uses evaporated and dry milk are as good as fresh milk and standard grades of canned goods are just as nourishing as those of the fancy class, "In these and many other ways It is possible to out cost without cutting down nutritive quality at the same time. But cutting food costs Intelligently can be done only It the home, maker knows food values. There are plenty of ways today to get this knowledge In books, maga zines, bulletins, newspaper col umns, or first hand from local nutritionists." MENU BREAKFAST: Tomato and lemon juice, oatmeal, toast, coffee, milk. LUNCHEON: Raw vege table salad, brown rice muf fins, hard candles, tea, milk. DINNER: Sauteed beef liv er, mashed potatoes, grilled tomatoes, mixed greens, sal. ad, blackberries and top milk, cookies, coffee, milk. U. S. OETS NEW BASE MANITOWOC, Wis., P) The army knocked the props from an acrobatic act which appeared last year with a circus whan it inducted Raymond J. Rnslnsky, 25. Rosinsky, the catcher for four other men in the act at one point held all four on his shoulders. TOMATO JUICE 22c (VHamlna A, SI, t, 0) u. CLAM JUICE , lie IVHaiMl B l laSHMt . II at, GRAPEFRUIT JUICE U It ORANGE JUICE 10c LOGANADE II (. tM ...-V 32c 29c ,....23c FRUITS FRUIT COCKTAIL, 2 No. 2'j cant 48c GRAPEFRUIT, 2 No. 2 cant 29a BARTLETT PEARS, 2 No. J'i cant 3Je SALAD FRUITS, 2 No. 1 cant 35c . -rC ITY Mt 2 lbs. 29c 2 lbs. 35c . . lb. 10c pressed,. Dial 3138 Free Deltrery CM PILOT'S TEST Leo F. Purlnton, accompanied by Dorothea Exroad Thursday received a commercial pilot's license with a 2-F land rating at Medford municipal airport after flying to Medford from Klamath Falls, according to an announcement from the local airport. E. F, Leach was the CAA In spector who conducted Purln ton's test. On the return trip to Klamath Falls the plana flew over Lake o' the Woods. The airplane runway at the moun tain resort was said to be quite rough In spots but can be used In raso of emergency. While in Medford Miss Exroad visited her parents. IMPORTANT PROTECTION PHILADELPHIA. W) Amer ican war fliers won't get shot In the pants, If military authorities can help It. A major product of a new ar mor factory here, la a thick plate to go under the seats of mili tary airplanes to prevent what might be called "unlucky hits" from below. FINE FOODS CORNER 7th and PINE STREETS FREE DELIVERY. . . . DIAL 3138 Prices for Saturday and Monday tlHirTvEGETSTis JUICY VAttttCIA M..A0 . ur""7,V,tEDL. 5S5rult fllESH iocki sp?e; " " tKBa ill - 1 e-SSS ru? i ' .-...ah PM- v Cider Vinegar Qt. bottle 14e Long White Rice 2-lb. box 21c Tomato Catsup 14-oz. bottle 15c Peanut Butter 2-lb. jar 36c Ripe Olive 2 No. 1 tall cans 35c Brown Bread Med. cans 11c ' Baked Beans 16-ox. cans 11c s' Century Sweet Pickles, Quart Jar ...27c CHATEAU HORSERADISH FLAVOR SAUCE OS. Bottle 25c ' Serre with Meats Salads Us to Season s Medium Shrimp " Apple Sauce & Red Salmon Cling Peaches, Large Halves HOUGRAIN WHEAT, RYE or RICI WAFERS Box l9c 14 HOT-ROLLS PANCAKES June IB. Uit Only 107 Stallions On State Register Soma indication of how the draft horse hat declined In re cent years Is evident In the fact that Oregon had but 107 stal lions registered on the bonks of the state department of agricul ture animal division on June 1. Eighty-nine of these are pure breds, of which 64 are draft horses and 25 light breeds, Fif teen grado atalllons and two Jacks are also registered. The 36 Porcherons lead the broods In draft horses and Pal omlnoe, with eight, top the light horses. MurloiV county, with 19, has more stallions registered than any other county. Next Is Wal lowa with 10. Lano county has nine; Linn, eight; Clackamas, seven. Other countlos huve from ono to six. The two Jacks are In Linn and Malheur couutios. FIGHT POSTPONED PHILADELPHIA, June 12 (UP) The 15-round title fight between BonUimwolght Cham pion Lou Salica and Chullenger Tommy Forte of Philadelphia, scheduled for tonight at Shlbe park, was postponed until Mon day night because of rain. '5 doX, 3tC , tftr 25c ' 4 b$. 19C " . i9c 4 1 t.k ....,mbers iw 2 cans 35c No. 2 can 15c No. 1 tall can 32c 2 No. VA cans 39c VANO Household Cleanser QUART BOTTLE 29c 20c OZ. CARTON OR FRENCH TOAST Both for 15c c