Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 67, No. 271, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 28, 1981 Page: 3 of 16
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RECIPE
Files and Help!
Collected by
Aunt Willie
Island Goodness
What’s better than
chicken? Lorono H. says the
addition of macadamia nuts
adds flavor, glamour and a
texture that is matchless.
Chicken Mauna Loa
2 Tbsp. butter or
margarine, 3 lb. chicken
parts, 2 Tbsp. chopped onion,
2 c. chicken broth, 4 tap.
salt, pinch ground black
pepper, V« c. dry white wine,
2 Tbsp. flour, Vi c. coarsely
c topped macadamia nuts.
In a large skillet melt
butter. Add chicken; brown
on all sides; remove chicken
and set aside. Add onion;
saute until golden, about 5
min. Push onion to side of
pan, drain off drippings. Add
chicken broth, salt and
pepper, mix well. Bring to a
boll, stirring constantly to
loosen brown bits from
bottom of pan. Add reserved
chicken. Simmer, covered,
until chicken is tender, about
45 min. Combine wine and
flour. Add to skillet; cook
and stir until thickened,
about 2 min. Stir in
macadamia nuts. Place
chicken on serving platter
and spoon sauce over. Serve
with steamed rice and
garnish with parsley, if
desired.
Thirst Quencher
Della Mae sends us a
punch that she says is
refreshing and lends a
festive touch to any oc-
casion.
Lemony Cooler
1 can (12 oz.) frozen
concentrated orange Juice, 4
scoops lemonade flavor
drink mix, 2 qt water, 1
bottle (28 fl. oz.) ginger ale,
chilled, halved strawberries.
Reconstitute orange juice
as directed on can. Combine
orange juice, lemonade mix
and water in large punch
bowl. Just before serving,
add ginger ale and
strawberries.
baked and stored in the
freezer for entertaining or
when unexpected guests stop
by. It comes from Candaco
Call.
Prune-Whaat Garm Bread
1V4 c. all-purpose flour,
two-thirds c. sugar, 4 c.
toasted wheat germ, 1V4 tsp. mis cneryi wooiard
Sapulpan’s kin
or margarine, softened, 2 . ,
eggs, 4 c. dairy sour cream, f'QCCl V6S degree
i c. diced pitted prunes, v^c. Woolard of
chopped walnuts. oklahoma ^ (Jaughter *
Kitchen range fires:what to do
"■Fuips »uaia.; nciaiu, lunui;, JUiy ao, imi-
Preheat oven to 375 deg. In
a large bowl, combine flour,
sugar, wheat germ, apple pie
spice, soda and salt Add
butter. With a pastry blender
or two knives cut in butter
until mixture resembles
coarse crumbs.
In a small bowl, lightly
beat eggs; stir in sour
cream. Blend into flour
mixture along with prunes
and nuts. Stir just until
mixed. Spoon into a greased
9-in. loaf pan. Bake until a
cake tester comes out clean,
about 50 min. Cool in pan on
a rack for 10 min. Remove
cake from pan and cool.
Serve warm or cooked with
butter or jam.
Delicious Preserves
Here’s another of the
preserve recipes sent by
Emma Jean G.
Plum Preserves
2 qt. plums, cut off seeds, 6
c. sugar.
Wash fruit, cut off the
seeds and measure. Put the
sugar over the plums and let
stand for 3 or 4 hours. Cook
rapidly, stirring frequently,
until liquid gives jelly test.
Pack into sterilized jars and
seal.
Patty Belisle and the late
Rev. Fred Woolard, received
her Master’s degree at
Central State University on
Sunday at 8 p.m.
Miss Woolard received her
B. S. in Ed. degree from
Southwestern State
University, graduating
summa cum laude. She has
taught in the Yukon public
schools for the past eight
years.
Beginning this fall, she will
be working with gifted
children in the Yukon
schools. She and three other
teachers will write their own
curriculum. They will be
attending a workshop
related to work with gifted
children on Aug. 3, 4, and 5.
It will be held in Tulsa.
Miss Woolard is the
granddaughter of Virginia
Wagner of Sapulpa and
Gertrude Norvell of
Heavener.
is
V
LINCOLN, Neb. (UPI) -
Eight home grease fires
occur every hour on
America’s kitchen ranges.
Mishandled cooking fires
injure about 35,000 people a
year and cause an estimated
$46 million in property
damage.
“All too often people panic
trying to put the fire out and
end up doing something that
only makes matters worse,"
says extension safety
specialist Rollin Schneider.
Schneider says you should
resist that first impulse to
reach for a glass of water or
put the pan under a faucet.
These are the worst things to
do, he says, because oil is
lighter than water, so it will
simply float on top and
continue to bum.
Moving the pan is even
more dangerous, says the
University of Nebraska
extension specialist. Either
the Dan is so hot you drop it
or you trip over someone
else.
Moving the pan also fans
air into 1L That makes the
grease flare and increases
the chances of setting fire to
hair and causing severe
facial and hand bums. It can
also lead to superheated air
being inhaled into the lungs.
To effectively fight kitchen
grease fires, Schneider says:
Try not to panic.
Act as quickly as possible.
Putting out a fire while it is
small keeps damage to a
minimum.
Depending on the nature of
the fire, cool it, starve It or
smother it
The third choice is
preferable for grease fires,
he says, because they cannot
be cooled quickly enough. A
skillet holds heat even when
the burner is turned off.
Starving a grease fire
doesn’t work, he says,
because there’s usually
enough grease in the pan to
feed it for some time.
So, the best thing to do is
ease the pan lid or a cookie
tin or a cutting board or
another pan over the flames
from the sides. This
minimizes the chances of
your being burned because
the lid (or substitltute) acts
as a shield until the pan is
safely covered and the
oxygen to the fire is cut off.
Even a dampened cloth
can be used to smother the
fire if none of the preceding
articles are close at hand,
Schneider says.
Baking soda is a second
choice to smothering a fire,
he adds. Flour or cereal
should never be substituted
because flour can explode
when thrown on u fire.
Turning on an overhead
fan is just as dangerous, he
says, because it fans the
flames and can send fire and
smoke through the house or
apartment and set the entire
building on fire.
Attend regional CAR meetings
CAR ob-
Couple returns from Northwest trip
Mr. and Mrs. Olen
Aemisegger have returned
from a vacation trip to
Montana and Washington,
during which they attended
the 30th reunion of Sue
Aemisegger’s class and also
a family reunion.
Their first stop was at
Shelby, Mont., where they
attended Mrs. Aemisegger’s
class reunion on July 11.
They received the prize for
having come the greatest
distance to attend.
From Shelby they drove to
Whitefish and Glacier
National Park for sight-
seeing. From there they
went by Amtrak to Spokane,
Washington, for a reunion
with Sue’s brothers.
At the reunion were Gene
Annis, Jay Annis, Larry
Annis, all of whom live there,
and Doug Annis of Sapulpa
who is stationed at Fairchild
Air F orce Base in Spokane.
The reunion was highlighted
with games of volleyball and
a swim in the Spokane river.
Aemisegger and Doug
Annis played golf several
times before he flew back to
Sapulpa leaving Mrs.
Aemisegger for more
vacationing.
From Spokane, Sue went
to Redding, Calif., for a visit
with her sister, Linda Wick-
wire.
Researcher says women set sights too low
&
feboby
Freezer Fresh
Here’s a recipe for a
spiced bread that can be
Women’s groups
urge buckle-up
CHICAGO (UPI) -
Members of 68 national
women’s organizations are
trying to get drivers and
passengers to use safety
belts every time they get into
a car.
In August the groups will
ask motorists and
passengers to sign written
pledge cards. The cards will
be returned to the sponsoring
community organizations for
forwarding to the National
Safety Council after labor
Day for a national
tabulation.
The cards will pledge in-
dividuals to use safety belts
themselves and safety re-
straints for their children.
The council estimates
fewer than 20 percent of
motor vehicle occupants
currently buckle up.
The council also estimates
2,000 lives a year are being
saved even by that low
Mod in your eye
Treat yourself to a
memade mud bath to
ep-cleanse your skin and
iprove circulation. Sprin-
e a bag of sterilized pott-
g soil into a large baking
in and bake in a 450-
tgree oven for 20 minutes,
emove pan from the oven
id cool completely. Then
ix in enough distilled
iter to form a thick paste,
nooth the mud all over
iur face and body, then let
dry for about five or ten
inutes. Wash it off in the
ower — start with warm
ater and gradually change
cool.
Super Steak
From the National Live
Stock & Meat Board comes
this recipe for using cubed
steaks.
Beef Cubed Steaks
With Tasty Topping
4 beef cubed steaks, 2
Tbsp. cooking fat, 4 tsp.
salt, Y« c. catsup, 2 Tbsp.
chopped green onion, y« c.
shredded Cheddar cheese.
Brown steaks on both sides
in fat for 5 to 6 min. Pour off
drippings. Top each steak
with 1 Tbsp. catsup, 14 tsp.
onion and 1 Tbsp. shredded
cheese. Cover and cook over
low heat 2 to 3 min.
Write Us
If you have a better way,
idea, recipe, problem,
solution, etc. you’d like to
share with other Readers in
Heraldland. We’U love you
for it Write “HELP,” care
of Women’s Editor, Daily
Herald, Box 1370, Sapulpa,
Okla. 74066.
The highest point in the U.
S. is Mount McKinley in
Alaska — 20,320 feet high.
A Girl for Mike and Kim
West, northwest of Sapulpa,
bom July 16 at Bartlett
Memorial Medical Center.
She weighed 8 lb., 12 oz. and
has been named Kristy
Michelle.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Bobby West, northwest
of Sapulpa and Mr. and Mrs.
Cecil McClanahan, south of
Sapulpa.
Great-grandparents are
Jessie Bassham, Mr. and
Mrs. Leonard West and Mrs.
Betty Mears, all of Sapulpa.
Mrs. West is the former
Kimberly Kay McClanahan.
Easing “The Flood”
NEW YORK-To contain
rising administrative expenses
in the health care and health in-
surance industries. II major
U.S. insurance companies have
formed the National Electronic-
Information Corporation
(NEIC)
NEIC will streamline the
manual claims submission and
handling process between
health care providers and insur-
ance carriers. It will be a central
clearinghouse for the electronic-
receipt and distribution of claim
information. Robert S. Bradley,
president, said.
"NEIC arose from the need
to reduce the paper flood which
threatens hospitals and insur-
ance companies."
Key executives of NEIC in-
clude Craig A. Butler, director
of marketing, and William F
King, director of systems
The Army’s physical
readiness test requires that a
soldier be able to run two
miles in under 14 minutes in
order to be classified as
physically fit.
NEW YORK (UPI) - A
survey by two university
faculty members indicates
“women set their sights too
low" in the business world
and, consequently, don't
-earn as much as men.
The study by professors
Mariann Jclinek of McGill
University and Anne Harlan
of Wellesley College found
seven percent of the male
MBA students surveyed
expected their starting
salaries to exceed $65,000 a
year — but no ^women
surveyed did. Researchers
found 28 percent of the men
expected their salaries to
eventually top $200,000 a
year, compared with only 9
percent of the female
management students.
”... a disproportionate
number (of women) wind up
in specialist positions or staff
tracks in support units such
as purchasing, advertising
and personnel,” the
professors write in the July
issue of Working Woman
magazine.
The article says another
reason women earn less is
their employers’ assumption
they prefer desk jobs to so-
called "dirty work”
assignments in such fields as
manufacturing.
But women municipal em-
Neat treat
Singer Melba Moore
revealed to Beauty Digest
her way of giving herself a
special beauty treat: “I go to
a hairdresser, get a facial, a
pedicure, a body massage. I
stay there all day ana let
them do whatever they
want. Unfortunately, 1 only
get a chance for this kind of
indulgence once every few
months’’
ployees recently asked
transfers from such desk
work to the police and fire
forces, the article says.
While some took immediate
pay cuts as a result, all
expect better advancement,
the article adds.
U.
POLLY’S POINTERS
* Polly Fisher
Two area members were
among those attending the
Mid-Southern Regional and
the South Central Region
meetings of Children of the
American Revolution held
recently.
The Mid-Southern regional
sessions were held at
Knoxville, Tenn. July 10-11,
and the South Central Region
meeting in Fort Worth July
14-15.
Present for the two
meetings were Rashel Hogue
and Mrs. Carol Hpgue,
Mannford. Rashel, a
member of creek Nation
Society, Sapulpa, served as
National Chairman of the
American Indian Com-
mittee.
Presiding at the session in
Knoxville were Amy Sue
vice
president, and Mrs. Clarence
Smith, senior national vice
president, both from
Virginia. States of the Mid-
Southem Region are Ken-
tucky, Tennessee, Virginia,
and West Virginia.
Presiding at the sessions in
Fort Worth were Martha
Butler, Louisiana, and Mrs.
R. W. McKellar, senior
national vice president, from
Texas. States included in the
South Central region are
Arkansas, Louisiana,
Mississippi, Oklahoma and
Texas.
Mrs. Hogue and Rashel
were the only Oklahomans
attending the Mid-Southern
Regional in Tennessee, and
the only Sapulpans attending
the South Central meeting in
Fort Worth. Other Oklahoma
societies represented were
John Bray Society, Del City;
Minute Men, Norman and
Medicine Bluff, Iawton.
Workshops were held for
tiie study of the
jectives
Rashel presented the
American Indian program in
Fort Worth.
Tours of the James White
Fort and Blount Mansion in
Knoxville, and of historic
Cowtown in Fort Worth were
highlights of the trip.
Honored guests from
national headquarters,
Washington, D. C. were Miss
Mary Sue Piacesi, Nati inal
President; Mrs. Thomas G.
Burkey, senior National
President; and Mrs. David
D. Porter, executive
secretary.
Tuesday
Toastmasters, Int.—6
p.m., Little Gem
Restaurant.
Wednesday
Ubrary Board Meeting-
Noon, Sapulpa Library.
Overeaters Anonymous—
10 am., Suite 123, Creek
Hills Mall.
Crafts Class—9 am.,
Community Center, Taft and
Bixby.
Thursday
Calico Quilters—6:30 p.m.,
First United Methodist
Church fellowship hall.
Westside Free Will Baptist
Mission Group—7:30 p.m., at
church.
I OOF Lodge—7:30 p.m.
First Church of God
Missionary Society—9 to 2,
at church.
Picnic—Creek County
Extension Clubs, Heyburn
lake.
Marks on mirror
By Polly Fisher
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY We sprayed a popular
household cleaner on a mirror, but didn't wi
brand of
wipe it off
immediately It left marks on the mirror Any sueges
lions on how to get them off? — N
DEAR N. — Try washing that mirror with full-
strength white vinegar. That should cut through the
dried cleaner. Actually, vinegar or vinegar and water
is one of the finest glass cleaners you can use. It will
polish up your mirror shiny-bright. — POLLY
DEAR POLLY — Here are some Pointers that I hope will
help some of your readers:
Gloxinia or African violet leaves may be rooted by putting
the stem through an empty spool and floating in a glass of
water
Rose bush slips will take root if you stick the stem in a
white potato
To catch mice, place a gumdrop in the trap When the
mouse eats the gumdrop, his teeth will get stuck and cause
the trap to go off. - MRS D J
NOTONOE...
NCT FOUR TIME8...BUT
** • taUUit
12 TIMES A YEAR
<? . /
^Apecial
f-^ersonaf
c
v
are
SMITH FUNERAL HOME
Lee At Oak
224 1313
couple of tablespoons of steak sauce and ketchup Spread
shredded cheddar cheese evenly over the hamburger and
cover until the cheese is melted. Then just scoop up onto a
regular hamburger bun — L.J.W
DEAR POLLY — Years ago a home economist taught me
that it is "hard to climb up a greased hill." She always used a
paper lining in the bottom of cake pans, and now I do, too
No greasing is needed at all
I place the pan over a piece of onionskin or typing paper
and trace its shape onto the paper I cut the paper a little
smaller than the line and place it in the pan It is simple to
loosen the sides of your cake with a table knife Then just
peel off the paper — L.C.
Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you newspaper
pon clippers if she uses your favorite Pointer, Peeve or
Problem in her column Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care
of this newspaper
ask vour tinancial source...
are
cou
we ate!..
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Lake, Charles S. Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 67, No. 271, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 28, 1981, newspaper, July 28, 1981; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1504299/m1/3/?rotate=270: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.