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Thursday, February 22, 1951 INDIAN VALLEY RECORD
I II
Russia Woos Iran
T T lS NO secret that the key to
Soviet Russia's war-making
ability is oil. It is also no secret
that Russia does not have sufficient
oil to continue a war for more than
two or three months. Thus she must
get more oil before she starts bus-
tilities.
This is why the little country of
Iran, a land of nomad tribes and
vast oil reserves, may be the key to
future peace.
Should Moscow be able to take
over Iran's priceless oil fields, she
would not only have enough oil to
wage war, but would also have ac-
cess to the Indian ocean through
the Persian Gulf. This would proba-
bly mean that India, Arabia, and
the near east eventually would be-
come Sovietized.
In view of this, the uncensored
news of what is happening in Iran
today is extremely important.
This news is that Moscow is
waging a quiet and extremely ef-
fective campaign to take over Iran
by friendly infiltration. Simulta-
neously, the United States has so
bungled its diplomacy--including
our failure to put through a $25,000,-
000 loan--that Iran is on the verge
of tossing aside its traditional
friendship with the U.S.A.
Unquestionably what Russia is
aiming at is envelopment of Iran
by peaceful means. To do otherwise
would ruin the oil supply. For, any
armed clash over Iran would bring
about bombing and the demolition
of Iran's oil fields, thus defeating
Moscow's chief reason for taking
over the country.
The Soviet strategy, therefore, is
1o have Iran nationalize her oil
fields, then hire Russian experts to
"advise" on oil well operation.
U. S. Bungles
This strategy has made much
nore progress thn most people
realize, and has been speeded up
by the following factors:
1. When Iran faced a famine in
19t8-1950 we hemmed, hawed, and
delayed about sending wheat. Mean-
while, our reputation as a humam-
tartan nation vanished.
2. The Anglo-Iranian oil company,
owned by the British government,
has operated as if Iran were a
cnlony.
3. We have sent Iran consider-
ably less military and economic aid
than her neighbors.
4. The $25,000,000 loan extended
by the Export-Import bank had so
many conditions attached that the
Iranian parliament will probably
veto it.
U.S. Ambassador Henry Grady
has been pour, ding Washington cor-
ridors trying to pry loose the $25,-
if/}0.000 in a hurry. He is getting
nowhere fast.
Meanwhile, lran hs cut off the
Vo.ce of America, has given free
play to the Voice of Moscow, and
:: negotiated a new trade treaty
with Russia, giving favorable treat-
meat to Iranian products. In briel,
Moscow has found that friendship
pay3, and is working at it overtime.
Di Salle Jibes Senators
Jaunty Price Administrator Mike
Di Salle woz the toughest commit-
tee in congress over to his ideas
on price control the other day.
"Do you figure on controlling all
prices, or a few?" the ex-mayor of
Toledo was asked by members of
the joint economic committee.
Mike thought it over, then re-
plied:
"I asked that question of a farm-
er friend of mine and he said his
grandpappy told him: When you
cut a cat's tail, you should cut it
off right at the body, because 'if
you try to cut it off an inch at a
time, you'll have a sore tail and
a mad cat. I think he's right."
Asked by Senator Tft what he
thought controls would do, Di Salle
answered: "It's like driving along
at 60 miles an hour, and suddenly
you see a red light and you try to
stop. You'll go 30 to 60 feet before
you come to a stop."
Another time Di Sails was asked
where he would get his staff to
administer prices•
"We get civil service as far as
we can." replied Di Salle. Then
glancing at politically minded
solons who incessantly clamor for
jobs, he said: "Of course, some
people in congress have been kind
enough to recommend people to
US."
Before Di Salle left the stand, he
dropped a word of caution: "We're
going to try our best, but even with
that and more we can't buy a
steak in 1951 with the money we
paid in 1938."
Alienating Voters
Here is how not to get re-elected:
A group of Montana farmers
• found Sen. Zales Ecton, himself a
Montana farmer, in a grumpy mood
the other day, As they were
ushered into his office, Ecton snort-
ed angrily:
"I wish you people would quit
bothering me. I wish you would
leave me alone, so I can get con-
structive work done with some of
my fellow senators."
Without a word. the farmera
walked out. q
By INEZ GERHARD
HOUNTER-SPY", now heard on
- Thursdays at 9:30 p.m., EST,
on NBC, is the first of the major
network programs to combine, on
a permanent basis, lively entertain-
ment with on-the-hour reports of
the latest measures for national de-
fense. In keeping with the recent
national emergency edict, Phillips
H. Lord, the program's creator,
made immediate plans to mold the
half-hour drama toward a vigorous
awakening of the public to defense
problems. Don MacLaughlin con-
.The Home Workshop
...... B hB iltf R dU
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• • •
WORKSHOP PATTERN SERVICE WORK. BFMCH "
Drawer 1O RTTRN 338
Bedford Hills, New York
Tuna Fish and Noodles Make Favorite Casserole
(See Recipes Bdow)
DON MacLAUGHLIN Lenten Casseroles
tinues to star as "David Harding", CASSEROLES ARE an excellent
chief of the U.S. counter-spies. The solution to Lenten menus, especial-
new series will keep the public ly when they're hearty and nourish-
aware of the work of U.S. agents ing. Fish, eggs and cheese, all good
in foreign countries and also here. protein f o o d s,
/9/ // (k form a base for
Dinah Shore will have real up- j/, ,t:.J.'x these substantial
portunities for acting- as well as dishes, w h i l e
singing in "Aaron Slick from Pun- sauces and veg-
kin Creek", as a young widow on etables are add-
whose farm oil is discovered. She I ed to some of
is teamed with coroedian Alar. i them for extra
Young and opera star Robert Mer. I appeal, color or
rill, with whom she will sing a de- f calories.
lightful score composed by Evans I' Prove to yourself and to the faro-
and Livingston, whowrote "Mona fly that Lenten fare can be inter-
Lisa" and "To__Each_ His Own." !i pea.eating with some of these new reel-
Smiley Burnette, co-starred with! * * *
Charles Starret in Columbia west-] SPAGHETTI and noodles play an
i erns, has taped a series of radio important part in these two :ecipes
recordings of all 140 of the songs to give you a wonderfully filling
he has composed for them; he will meal out of a casserole:
also record dozens he used with Eggs Tetrazzini
Gene Autry. (Serves 4)
On the March 7th broadcast of t- 6 ounces spaghetti
"Portia Faces Life" the woman of i cup diced celery
the week to be saluted will be Miss 2 tablespoons chopped green
Jessie Binford, executive director pepper or parsley
of the Juvenile Protective Associa- 1 tablespoon f i n e ! y chopped
tion of Chicago. For more than 50 onion
years she has fought the battles of I 4-ounce can mush.ooms,
juvenile delinquents; officials esti- drained
mate that she has saved more than cup b:tter
75,000 youngsters from lives of' 1 tablespoon flour
crime and misery. cup milk
¼ pound sharp cheese, finely
Six important roles in the Pine- diced
Thomas "Crosswinds", on location ½ teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons worcestershire
at Homosassa, Fla., were awarded
i
to members of the Tampa, Flu., I
sauce
Little Theatre; other natives of 4 hard-cooked eggs
Tampa and nearby cities will round 4 cup grated Parmesan cheese
out the cast. Cook spaghetti according to pack-
,ge directions• vrepare sauce as
With Gordon MacRae, Jack Smith
and Rosemary De Camp all on
weekly radio shows, shooting sched-
ules on Warners' "On Moonlight
Bay" are tough to plan. MacRae's
on "Railroad Hour", Rosemary on
"Dr. Christian", Smith on three a
week.
Humphrey Bogart and Lauren
Bacall will co-star in a tran-
scribed radio series, "Bold Ven-
ture", beginning March 26. The
title's the name of a boat. In a
scene already finished, Bogart
listened to the explosive roar
of the boat's engines as en-
thusiastically supplied by the
sound man and said, "The way
this boat speeds, people will
wonder if I'm Humphrey Bogart
or Guy Lombardo."
follows: Cook celery, gze,n pepper,
onion and mushrooms in the butter
until onion is just transparent. Add
' flour and blend well. Add milk all at
once, cook.stirring constantly unti
uniformly thickened. BI e n d in
cheese, salt, worcestershire sauce.
Stir until cheese is melted. Set aside
several center slices of egg for
garnish. Chop remaining eggs and
add to the sauce. Heat to serving
temperatu re,
Tuna-Noodle Casserole
(Serves 4-6)
4 ounces medium or broad
noodles
I No. 2 can peas
I 7-ounce can tuna
2 tablespoons butter
tablespoons flour
teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons prepared mustard
cup liquid drained from peas
1 tall can evaporated milk
(1-% cups)
Jane Greer, star of.RKO's "The
ompany She Keeps", has gone in
for painting plates, specializing m Cook noodles in boiling salted
!bold primitives of horses. The water until tender, alut 10 rain.
group she's doing now will orna- utes. Drain the no(dles. Melt but.
ter in a saucepan. Stir in the flour
ment the plate rail in the playroom and salt. Gradu.
!f her Brentwood home. [ il ally add t h •
-- I A liquid drained
Juliet Colman, aged 6, recently: / ) from peas and
made her debut as an actress in _ 1, cook until .thick,
the role of a candy cane, in a show ,,',t ened, stirring o
at the Westiake school for girls, i -)i:# keep sn ooth.
Her parents, the "Halls of Ivy"! Stir l. the mus-
Colmans, wonder if it's her first l ":':': : "::" tard. then grad-
l iially add the milk. Continue cook-
ling over low heat until thickened.
Arrange noodles, peas and tuna.
step on the road to fame.
Larry Puck, production manager
for Arthur Godfrey and his "Talent
Scouts", answered a phone in the
studio the other night and found
Arthur was on the other end. The
connection was so bad Puck asked
"Where are you calling from,
Mars? .... You're not far off," said
Godfrey. "I'm in a plane 5000 feet
above Richmond, Va." Which was
]ust where he was.
which has been broken into bite-
sized pieces, in layers in a well
greased 1½ quart casserole. Pour
sauce over all and bake in a mod-
erate oven (350 °) for 20-25 minutes.
Clam and Eggplant Casserole
(Serves 5-6}
I eggplant
I can, vhnie or minced clams
I cup grated cheese
LYNN SAYS:
Practice Economy
With These Tips
Bulk pork sausage offers an easy
dinner solution when served with
a sweet potato casserole. #Make
patties from sausage and place on
pineapple slices spread with mus-
tard. Bake until done, about 30 min-
utes in a mederatc oven, basting
with pineapple syrup.
Top sauerkraut in a casserole
with frankfurters, then grated
cheese and mashed potatoes for an
economical, hearty main dish.
ODDS acl ENDS . . Jack
Bailey's tour of 10 major cities
with his Mutual "Queen for a Day"
has been set to start in April, with
the troupe returning to Hollywood
in May . , . James Stewart has
been signed by Universal-Interna.
tional to star in one of their biggest
forthcoming productions. "The Bend
of the Snake", a dramatic story of
the Northwest . , . All Hollywood
seems to be painting these days,
so Gene Nelson joined in, but not
on canvas--he started painting his
LYNN CHAMBERS' MENU
*American Pizza
Grapefruit, Olive and
Green Salad
Stuffed Celery
Banana Cream Tarts Beverage
*Recipe Given
Butter
1 8-ounce can tomato sauce
Salt and pepper
Peel eggplant. Cut into inch cubes
and fry ha butter until clear. Place
layer of eggplant in buttered bak-
ing dish. Top with layer of clams.
Sprinkle e a c h
/20 layer clams with
( salt, pepper and
/ g r a t ed cheese.
When dish is full,
pour canned to-
mato sauce over
all. Bake in hot oven 400 °) for 30
minutes.
*American Pizza
(Serves 6)
2 cups sifted flour
3 teaspoons baking powder
$. teaspoon salt
¼ cup butter
1!cup milk (scant)
I can condensed tomato soup
or 1 can tomato puree
1 cup cubed American cheese
(about ¼ pound)
2 tablespoons finely diced
green peper
1 tablespoon minced parsley
2 tablespoons grated onion
1 clove garlic, finely cut
Prepare a drop biscuit dough
from the first 5 ingredients: spread
dough in bottorn of a buttered 8x2-
inch baking dish. Pour mxture of
tomato soup or puree, cheese, .pep-
per, parsley, onion and garlic over
dough. Bake in moderately hot oven
(400 °) for 20 to 25 minutes.
Baked Potatoe with
Cheese-onion Sauce
(Serves 6}
6 medium potatoes
cup butter
!/i cup flour
2 cups milk
1 teaspoon salt
Dash cayenne
½ teaspoon Woreetershlre
sauce
Few drops Tabasco sauce
l cups grated prosessed strong
cheese
I bunch green onh,ns (about 18)
including tops, chopped
Bake potatoes in moderately hot
oven (460 °) for 40-60 minutes. Make
crosswise gashes in top of each,
turn back flaps and fluff up pulp.
Pour about V cup hot cheese-on-
ion sauce over each and serve re-
mainder tn bowl. T,)p with a little
chopped green onion. If served with
senk or roast, the meat Juice,
poured on potato tefore sauce is
ut on, gives extra flavor. For sauce
combine butter, flour and milk as
for white sauce.
Scrambled Eggs with Shrlmpm
(Serves 4)
4 tallespoons buter
1 small onion, chopped
I mushroom, sliced
cup sliced, cooked shrimps
tomatoes, skinned, sliced
4 eggs
teaspoon salt
teaspoon pepper
2 tablespoons cream
slices buttered toast
2 tablespoons grad cheese
Melt the butter in a heavy pan,
add the or.ion and mushroom, and
simmer 4 to 5 minutes. Add the
shrimps and tomatoes. Shake over
fire 2 minutes. Add eggs mixed with
salt, pepper and cream. Stir over
low fire until creamy.
The last cubes of pot roast can be
placed in a casserole of noddies and
held together with rich. brown
gravy. Add leftover peas and car-
rots for color ff you have them.
Slivers of pork roast offer a good
meal when they're fried with cooked
rice and mushrooms. Scramble eggs
in the mixture of rice, mushrooms
and pork, if you want to extend it.
What could be better than a club
sandwich of lettuce, tomato and
bacon? Serve with thin American
cheese sauce, and you'll have a
meal.
J FRIED UGHT--FRIED RIGHT
SNOWDRIFT Serves 'Era Up-Qulck and Good/ |
u the end of the ham this simple new way. |
Use _P .... a ..... drift makes fried foods lighter |
j ,,uie-rymg mo-,,- |
[ _tastier---digestible! |
l SNOWDRIFT'S HAM AND EGG PANCAKES l
| "Ibls recipe tested by Good Hosekeepl.g mg#zie. |
Combine first 6 ingredientS. Heat
I ge 2 tbsp. Snowdrift in skillet. Drop |
I I tablospoon milk half of mixture by tablespoons in. I
| t teaspoon salt to hot Snowdrift. Fry until
browned on both sides. (Snow- |
I ¼ teaspoon pepper drift is so light, pure and digest,- |
ibis.) Add 2 tbsp. Snowdrift to
V cup flour
l cup cooked ham, flndy slcillet and pan.frY second batch. |
Serve at once. Makes about 12 |
| chopped small pancakes. An excellent way
¼ cupSnowdrift for quick.fryln 9 to use up leftover ham |
...............
Don't give In ta the "Cold
Demons"--get Mentholatum I
Fast, safe Mentholatum
soothes smarting nostrils.
helps open stuffed-up pas-
sages ao you can breathe
again in comfort. Eases pain-
ful chest congestion and
coughing, too. In jars, tubes.
BE "RIGHT" IN
LoS ANGELES I
Enral clowntown location .., /"
ex00o.t 00oo. o.d co00.
II [W'I I ' ;' I/.
h !
... II-
AB,' ',,-'. A-,,. Ikenflold, Calif. I/F'],..
lli:lL4,5 = w,o,o. Cn,f. I "Pl'" '.
.oo,,.,,.,,, I l i
¾
The career with a lifetime future
BJg ON OF AMIUCA' NUMSIgS2
• This Is a golden oppo:tunity for
high chool graduate to receive cae
of the finest prossional educations
in the world--an education that wiU
twefu] !1 yOUr Ufel
As a Maduato nu:so you will hav
you: clmice f many diffmut
You wfl] meet and work wfl;h -m
of the finest people you'g event know.
Visi yot local or 2mol
of Nursing today. They
will tell you how you may
join woman' poud.#
profess/on/