T'was The Night After Christmas And. . .
i
PAGE 18
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls. Oregon
Thursday, November M. 1963
Railroad drama in four j
acts pictured here will be
played in many homes ,
during the nights and
weekends after Christ-
mas. The plot is basic; you j
can substitute model rac- ;
ing cars, airplane kits or
what-have-you for the
comotive and cars.
"junior's first lesson in the f
fact of life that men are
but outsize boys. Protag
onists for this enactment
it's 'mt&y
1 I I . i
I?
are Roger Stewart of i
Weyerhaeuser Company's J '
Tacoma, Wash., office, &w'igy.
and his son Dean, 9. Dad knows Just what dad
:'1
Safe sfefey?
m i a t i
m
1
Barbecued Pig Is Puerto Rican Party fare
cobs, 1 teaspoon of salt and s4ispoon of vanilla. Pour into an
f dinar Rrpak 3 pnas ttith's hv ft hv 3-inch creased oven-
' Vi 4 , J
(oops)
junior wanted. just hold on for a MINUTE, son. Here's how . .
1 ,
m
O
1 . i
- iTirriirti i ii in
i'l A .;:
-.1 e . .." a
NEW YORK (UPI) - "Roast
p: and ritual" are typical out
door party fare in Puerto Rico,
but the island s cuisine also re
flects sophisticated continental in
fluences, says Senora Carmen
Aboy Valldejuli.
Barbecued pig with garlic
sauce is popular for cookouts, ad
ded the senora, a leading food
authority in the U. S. common
i wealth. But there's little outdoor!
cooking as on the mainland. In
Ian interview, she described Carib
bean food, and Puerto Rican in
j particular, as a cosmopolitan
imalange adapted to local ingred
ients and tastes.
Inofficial Food Consultant
j The charming, gray- haired
grandmother, wife o! engineer
Louis Valldejuli, is unofficial food
consultant for government visitors
land the author of two cookbooks.
"Cocina Criolla." in Spanish, and
used as a textbook in Puerto Ric
an public schools, and "The Art
of Caribbean Cookerv," in Eng
lish. Senora Valldejuli said typical
Puerto Rican foods include adap
tations of American apple pie.
Christmas eggnog and Thanks
giving turkey. Fresh apples
stewed with sugar and butter re
place raw, sugared apples in the
pie.
Eggnog is made with coconut
milk and rum instead of plain
milk and bourbon. The turkey is
washed with lime juice and wat
er, seasoned highly, and filled
; - PIWWWI
i- f r l i-1 i rtfa Lh M 3 fi 1, mill i '
"Well, a fellow can always play with the atlfos imlil he's done with the train." Walt till dad learns Junior hijacked one engine.
Population Advance Slowly Squeezes Out Grange Orchards
; SAN FRANCISCO (UTI) -;
Southern California's unny Or-
ange County used to live up to
: its name: the orange and 1cm-
on trees stretched in orderly
- rows as far as the eye could
. see.
; I Today, bulldozers are rooting
I out the trees at the rnlc of 3,000
-.' .acres a year, and Orange
: Counly is virtually out of the
-: running as a citrus producer.
Sanla Clara County, a lush
' ; food basket at the southern
edge of San Francisco Bay,
! ; was America's biggest straw.
I berry-producing county 10 years
! ago: it also grew half of the
; ' world's prunes and a giant
share of the nation's pears. But
! today, fruit and vegetable trad
crs in Sanla Clara County are
' ! talking about ImporlinB crop3
: instead of exiorting them.
California Is losing foot by
foot, acre by acre one of its
most precious possessions: its
' rich, Incredibly productive farm
- lands.
The land Is not disappearing.
It's still there, and it's just
C as fertile as ever. But it's be-
ing buried under an avalanche
J of freeways, factories, shopping
cqnlers and, most of all, hous
'. es.
As California continues its
dizzying population climb and
its headlong rush toward ur
banization, the cities are splash
ing outward into the country
. side. They don't grow up the
hillMdes and mountains be
cause it's too cxensive to level
;1 building sites there; they pour
instead down the ferlilo valleys
; that have helHy make Califor
.' ; tlia the nation's biggest food
; producer.
California I'rnhlrms
For jvar,s. people have fret
ted over California's growth
over Hie loss of natural scenery
! over the problems of providing
housing and fire departments
ami social welfare and trans
poi'tation for Hie burgeoning
y millions.
But now there's a new wnrrv:
Postscript
Is Added
SAI.F.M (l l'P - (iov. Mark
. Hatfield, who attended President
; ,lhn F. Kennedy s funoraf in
; Washington, 1). C , Monday, to-
day issued this postscript to his
earlier Tlianks.civuig proclama
tion: ".May we be tlmnkful for Hie
provisions o( mtr founding fath
ers wherein the reins of govern
ment pan from leader to leader
in death wwlxml revolution or
;disniiion.
;! ".May we be grateful the late
; President chose well his vice
president and made of him a
confidant so Owt lie might as
sume duties In tranquil but ef
fective transition."
In total darkness, the pupil of
the eye is about 40 limes larg
er than It is in dim light.
Where, with more and more
farmland covered, will the
stale's food come from?
The California state Depart
ment of Agriculture says that,
ol the 100.2 million acres in
California, lfi.4 million acres
are suitable for farming and
only half are good to prime
farm land.
Already, tirban development
covers about 2.5 million acres
in the state, mast of it land
that formerly was used for ag
riculture. By 1975, the depart
ment estimates, cities with cov
er 4 million acres.
Dig Population
"It Is estimated," said the
department "that by I'.rrs the
population of our stale will be
about 25 million persons. That
would be approximately R mil
lion moro than live in Califor
nia now. We shall need nil of
our remaining good soil to grow
the food for our people,"
For (hose who say that tech
nology is the answer that
science will improve land pro
ductivity indefinitely there is
this reply from Dr. F.lmer V.
Hraun, economic adviser for
the agriculture department:
"At the moment we're bor
rowing from technology. We're
going to wake up and the land
is going to be gone."
Braun said technology sim
ply is not going to be as much
help in the future as it has in
the past. The surpluses of to
day, he said, have obscured
tomorrow's need for farm lands.
"Without technology," accord
ing to Braun, "we would al
ready lie deploring our losses."
Agriculture on a large scale
is already virtually a thing of
the past in Los Angeles and
Orange counties, which once
were the citrus centers of the
West. As the sulxlivisions movo
in, the citrus growers move
out to Arizona, to the great
Central Vallev of California, to
the relatively low - populated
southeast corner of the state.
Sanla Clara County, home of
the rapidly growing metropolis
of San Jose, is finding that the
demand for food goes up as the
supply goes down.
L. 11. Scaletta has been a
food broker there since 11)39.
Ten years ago. he said, his
business was nearly all export
of local products through the
world. Tixlay, about half in
volves importing food for his
own county and he believes
the day is close at hand
when he will be bidding for
food against areas that used
to be his own best customers.
Daniel G. Aldrich dr., dean
of agriculture at the Vnivcrsity
of California at Berkeley, spoke
not only of California but of
tlie nation when he discussed
the situation in a speech earlier
this year.
Wasteful Kra
"While we have been con
quering half a continent," he
said, "we have not always been
mindful that our land, our wa
ters, and our space arc the re
sources, the basic ingredient of
this opulence we enjoy ... It
may well be, in this era of the
ranch house, the suburban su
pormart, the freeway, and the
40-mile commute, that we have
never been more wasteful. . .
"Cities arc where they are
largely because a living could
be made where rivers joined or
land was fertile. But farm cen
ters became cities. Now the
same cities are spreading out.
in some cases over nearly all
of the level and rich soils that
created lliem. We're seeing a
million acres of agricultural
land concreted over each year
I in the nation! for housing
tracts, school grounds, shop
ping centers, airports, and what
we call freeways in Calilnrnia.
Once the concrete is hud down,
a natural resource is cone."
Horse Was
Not Sardar
WASHINGTON I LTD - The
dark, riderless horse in the cor
tege that bore President Ken
nedy to his grave Monday was
Black Jack." a 16-year-old Ar
my mount used on ceremonial
occasions.
It was not "Sardar." Mrs.
Kennedy's horse as erroneously
reported in some dispatches mot
LPD.
Army Warrant Officer John
McKinney, who has charge of
the horses kept by the Army at
Ft. Myer, Va., labeled as incor
rect reports from other quar
ters that the skittish animal
was Sardar, which was a gift
to Mrs. Kennedy from Presi
dent Ay.ito Khan of Pakistan.
The White House also denied
the report.
Black Jack was named for
General of the Armies John J.
iBlack Jack Pershing, com
mander of the American Ex
peditionary Forces IAEF) in
France during World War I.
Pershing was an old cavalry
man. Black Jack represented a tra
dition dating back more than
1.000 years. In the days of
Genghis Khan, the Mongols and
Tartars sacrificed a horse at
the burial of a warrior in the
belief that the animal's spirit
accompanied its master's to
heaven.
The sacrifice was discarded
later, giving way to the custom
of having a riderless horse ac
company the (uncial of a fal
len soldier.
with meat-fruit stuffing insteadi
of bread dressing.
Lots Of Cheese
Elsewhere in the Caribbean.
Dutch islands cook with lots of
cheese. French islands with wine,
and all the Antilles with corn, a
reflection of their Indian heritage.
Beans and rice also are staple
in all island homes and her own
household uses three pounds of
rice a day for seven persons, she
added.
Plantains are another favorite
non-sweet bananas that never are
eaten raw. But they are fried,
roasted, baked, boiled and made
into fried chips.
Typical Caribbean food may be
sweet by mainland standards
poultry often is cooked in sweet
wine instead of dry table wine.
and sugar is added to some soups
and vegetables. But West Indians
like it that way, suggested her
husband, "because sugar is our
main product."
Less important economically,
but equally delicious, are jams,
jellies, preserves, sauces and
canned juices made from tropical
fruit such as guava, mangoe,
papaya, and pineapple. At a Puer
to Rican Thanksgiving dinner,
guava jelly substitutes for cran
berries, said the cooking expert,
and fresh fruit is a typical lunch
dessert.
Corn Treat
Torta de maiz tierno, or fresh
corn tart, is a typical Puerto
Rican dish from "The Art of
Caribbean Cooker v." Mix '4
pound of butter, melted, with l'i
cups of fresh corn grated from
CUD
a fork without beating. Gradually proof glass dish. Bake I hour in
add 1'4 cups of milk and 1 tea- a preheated 375-degree oven.
- CM. j
IHr'ti war if-i i-'-""
GIVE TO
The Salvation Army
Mcason's f greetings I
t-TrcnffnTTO7iwHrTTriirnirrrH "i r ttti u i i j nu , , -
FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE
WE WILL BE OPEN EVERY NIGHT
Sundays
Excepted
UNTIL CHRISTMAS EVE.
BEGINNING TOMORROW, FRI., NOV. 29
OPEN 9:30 AM to 9:00 PM DAILY
w Shop at Sears and Save
VLjr' ?atifartion Cuarantrrd or Yowr Money Back
SEARS
e. ..l r. OP"
om J,'9:30 AM 'til 9:00 PM Do
fn. iu 44i Unfi Cnrillma,
.TV)
c
fa
yfU Cfinstmas
vVShopping Spree ffl
'niaBriiui mhmmmm 11
fts-
REGAL SERVICE STATIONS
LET YOU WIN EVERYTHING
UJN YUUK... JOPpZ
Make out your shopping list, including
Regal's Discount Prices, and deposit
it in the box at your neighborhood
Regal Service Station. The total value
must not exceed $100. Be sure and
include your name, address and
telephone number on the list.
On December 21st one list will be
drawn and the winner notified to
come pick up everything on their
list. Purchase not required.
Presence not necessary to win.
It's fun, it's easy, and you can
enter as often as you like.
SAVE . SAVE . SAVE . SAVE . SAVE . SAVE
r7.l
TURNER PORTABLE
PROPANE HEATER
Infinite hit from low to hirh
wettinjr for inside or outdoors!
IVITI pr hotir-nlmmt
twir tt murn olhrn. .TrtOs
hnrll ftllowrt to stxnrl or
bnnR in unv position. Two ex
trn tflnks of fiil fre.
HbtiirrirftS.U 9
Regal Price $23.95
POPUUR REVERE WARE
$110 $6.99
BEACON ELECTRIC BLANKETS
KUit IIOAt
Twin St7 ,....$14 W $ 9S
PouMc HpH !" Jl fW
Dotihl Thrnl LM!:.
Retell
KoHnk Butfpt Ciimerii $ fi
2-Tninistor Rndio ... ."
Ijidie' Houp. 2 nr, ...
lenders CoiTpa M1pr. 14 'S
4fr "
;K S(pm I)rv In
Kin Si- TV Tmvi
lininifton Ktwtric
Toiih Hnih
fVier Hair Hrvr ...
UoTiinion 4-Slicd
'lM4tr
:l4 s
14
IOAL
H
8
14 KM
9 M
9 M
ARVIN
ELECTRIC
HEATER
Two tntnt pint
fn-fnrTd wrtnlh IVi
toctuitc tffmvMlnL
Retail $21.95
REGAL $12.95
TOYS
Values to U 00
REGAL'S PRICE
77c
BICYCLES
3 srwd. 2S inch
Boy) i Girii
Retail 559.95
REGAL $39.77
COMPLETE
SELECTION
OF TONKA
TOYS
4gy , j i mtrt t U M
Dmihlc BoiJr,
0 14 1
Sew. Fun,
1 4 qt TS S 49
Sure Pan. 2 qt. p 2A 4 49
Tn Ktt)p. 8 qu 6 95 9 99
FryP.n.8'.... 4 96 8.49
HAMILTON BEACH GIFTS
n4i1 iroAi
Minrtt Port Miir.IB.9S $11 UK
Delur. Chmm. Muir, IfiM
Two-nlir. Tomnrr .... 22.95 16 SS
COLEMAN FOR CAMPING
Sing le M.ntJ.
ljintrrn ...115.9B $1095
Cllnn .Itiff
with Spnut d 9S J 95
LP. 1'irnic
Slm 11 M x
-f'..t. rnol-. iqVi 107R
GILBERT TOYS
Rtit
Krartor St $ 1 .w
2fiK
14'"!
fTrowtry Jt . . . ,
!icolojr St ...
Tiwop St . . .
rzzl Tvntn ,
Tov Mitr
S-nthhie Buhhl
Horkv CVftm
Autonima
1 10 i.
.9
2 22
a
4 44
31
1 '
ft SA
Drive
"Sfretch your Pay
2 the Drive-in Way!"
5 1500 EAST MAIN, KLAMATH FALLS 2