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New Pittsburgh Courier from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania • Page 10

Location:
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

10 THE NEW COL.JER SEPT. 20, 1969 Tomato fanning The homemaker whoCltas a "ze'st for life generally considers cooking a creative pleasure. For this fortunate woman, this is tomato canning time. I i True enough that products are available. at the supermarket.

But what you can't buy is the fun of making sjjperb preserves at home. 4nd the family's pride in your aooking skill. Best of all, with the homemade preserves you control the flavor and the tastes just as you Into 11 the preserves goes lTabas liquid red pepper'sauce, long a familiar duo with to majpes. The nippiness of the Sepper sauce is perfection ith the sweet jiomemade tomato juice" for ustance, has a dash of Tabasco that will delight your guests as" much as it did patrons of a midwestern health spa.7here it was featured during; the 1920's. Canned tomatoes, of course, are a classic; the following recipe offers both the hot pack and cold pack versions Make them either way, but be sure Tabasco adds to ttfe fine taste.

Allow about three poonds tomatoes for a quart jar, about one' bushel for 18 Popular piccalilli is a won derful combination of toma toes with vegetables andspic es, one of the best tomato rel ishes. Homemade chili auce, too, is a favorite, esffiially with youngsters it's yreat with hot dogs and hamburgers. HOMEMADE TOMATO. JUICE Use ripe tomatoes. Wash Remove stem ends; cut into piec Woman fe am Director Of Readilq HAWKINS, TEXAS fMrs Seretha E.

Hilliard of 3905 Ross in Tyler, Texas, babeen appointed professor of Education and director of reading at Jarvis Christian College in Hawkins, according to JCstate ment by Dr. J. O. Peroener. president of the 57 yearofd in stitution.

IX. Before coming to JarytsrMrs, Hilliard was an instructional specialist for the TylerXBiblic School Staff Previously she baalso 5 Xm: 6ifi KITCHEN FUN: Enjojpending after Soon preparing all the vivid treats that to matoei yield Tomato Juice, Canned Tomatoes, Piccalilli, Chili Sauce. es. Simmer until softened, stir ring often. Put through strain er.

Add 14 teaspoon raDasco and 1 teaspoon salt to each quart juice. Reheat at once jost to boiling. Pack boiling hot juice in hot pint or quart jars to 14 inch of top. Process in boilding water bath (212 degrees 15 minutes. CANNED TOMATOES Use only perfect, ripe toma toes.

To loosen skins, dip into boiling water about tt. minute, then dip quickly into cold wa ter. Cut out stem ends and skin tomatoes. COLD PACK: Leave tomatoes whole or cut in halves or quarters. Pack in glass jars to Vi inch of top, pressing gently to fill spaces.

Add no water. Add 18 teaspoon Tabasco and teaspoon salt to pints; add 14 teaspoon Tabasco and 1 teaspoon salt to quarts. Process in boiling wa ter bath (212 degrees pint jars, 35 minutes; quart jars, 45 minutes. HOT PACK: Halve tomatoes. Do not add water, bring to a boil, stirring often.

Pack in hot glass jars to Vx inch of the top. Add 18 teaspoon Tabasco and tea spoon salt to pints; add 14 teaspoon Tabasco and 1 Tea spoon salt to quarts. Process in boiling water bath (212 de grees pint jars, 10 mm tues; quart jars, 10 minutes. PICCALILLI 5 green tomatoes 5 green peppers 2 sweet red peppers medium onions 1 small cabbage 14 cnp salt i x. xrx COMMISSIONED State University ROTC cadet Robert Conner of Washington, D.C.

beams as his mother, Mrs. Robert Conner (left) and friend Miss Anita i I if 4 MRS. SERETHA I. MILLIARD held positions as a teacher in public schools of both Bay City and Tyler. 1 tablespoon whole cloves 1 2 inch piece cinnamon stick 3 caps packed brown sugar 1 teaspoons celery seed 1 tablespoon mustard seed 2 cnps cider vinegar 1 teaspoon Tabasco Wash tomatoes; cut out stem and seed peppers; halve, then and seed peppers; halfe, then quarter lengthwise.

Peel and quarter onions. Quarter cab bage. Put tomatoes, red and green peppers, onions and cab bage through a food grinder, using the coarse blade. Sprinkle with salt Cover and let stand overnight Add cold wa ter to lover; drain, discarding liquid. Turn into a large kettle.

Place cloves, allspice and cinnamon stick in cheesecloth bag: add spice bag and re maining ingredients. Bring to the boiling point; reduce heat and simmer 15 minutes. Re move spice bag and put relish into clean, hot sterilized jars to within one inch of top. Pour hot paraffin over each and seal. YIELD: 4 pints.

CHILI SAUCE 8 pounds (4 quarts) skinned ripe tomatoes, cut in pieces 0 medium onions, chopped 6 green peppers, chopped 1 cnp sngar 2 tablespoons salt 3 cnps cider vinegar 4 teaspoons whole cloves 3 tablespoons whole allspice 1 tablespoon Tabasco Combine tomatoes, onion, green pepper, sugar, salt and vinegar in deep kettle. Tie spices in cheese cloth bag; add to ingredients in kettle. Cook, uncovered 2 tt to 3 hours, or until quite thick, stirring often. Remove spice bag; stir in Tabasco. Pour sauce at once into clean, hot sterilized jars; seal.

YIELD: 4 to 5 pints. The Tyler resident holds B.A. and M.S. in education from Prairie View University; she has done graduate work at Columbia University and the University of Nebraska; and she is working towards doctorate at the East Texas State University in Commerce. A native of Port Lavaca, Tex as, Mrs.

Hilliard received both degrees with high honors. The wife of Emmett Scott High School principal A G. Hil liard, the new Jarvis professor is associated with the Tyler Mental Health Associa 1 1 YMCA, Delta Sigma Theta So rority, Links, and Utopia Civic Club. Mrs. Hilliard is mother of two sons and a daughter, Clyde, Thomas, and Gale, and she attends the Bethlehem Bap tist Church in Tyler.

MW I eT XX fcm IBM: i X' Graves of Greensboro pin on second lien, tenant bars. Conner was commissioned In the U.S. Infantry last week Free Counsel Offered To New Business Free accounting and financial management counsel is being offered to new and struggling small businesses in depressed areas under a new program of the National Association of Accountants Using a plan tested successfully over the past year by the Washington Chapter of the as sociation, the 69,000 member or achievers. ganization has sent its 235 oth Inspired by the results of the Washington experience, an NAA member has made an anonymous contribution of $100,000 to assist the national organization in planning, administering and promoting the program. No direct financial aid to the small businessman is involved, but all services will be provided without compensation for approved applicants.

Special arrangements have been made with public and private agencies for referrals to the NAA chapters which elect to participate. The agencies in clude the Small Business Ad ministration, the Office of Min ority Enterprise of the U.S. De partment of Commerce, the In ter racial Council for Business Opportunity, the Black Economic Union, the Urban Coali tion, and the Lawyers' Commit tee for Civil Rights Under Law. Chapters will also work with accounting procedures, the NAA advisors will assist on such problems as costs, pric ing, credit and profit estimates. The basic objective is to teach the sew businessman how to perform these functions, not to do the detail work for him When the project is perform ing satsifactorily and the busi ness able to carry on alone or retain professional assistance, the volunteer advisor will withdraw.

Several other NAA chapters have started organizing their committees and services are expecieu to oe available in many areas of the country! wiinin two or three months Wallcovering In A Closet Okay so it's Fall cleaning time again. It happens every year and it doesn't make the job any easier if you complain about it. The best way to get started is to pull everything out of the closets. Throw' away all the junk you've accumulated since last year. By George, look at that! You can even see the walls.

Since you now have empty closets, why not show your individuality and provide yourself with a little incentive to keep them neat by installing some personality type wallcovering? Us ing wallcoverings to renovate your closet is one of the latest things in home decor and it's quite inexpensive. Perhaps you have a dressing room adjoining your bedroom closet mat could also use some livening up. Then, if you feel really creative, you can put wallcoverings on the doors. I dressers and accessories such as mirror frames. In the closet proper wallpaper hat boxes, shoe boxes and shelves.

Wallcoverings by United De Soto are particularly adaptable to making a routine Fall cleaning into a minor redecorating. They're prepasted for ease of installation; washable (which is Important in areas where grooming aids and cosmetics are used) and in many cases, strippable (removable in full width strips in seconds should you want to change the decorating scheme). If you're worried about getting complaints about your creative urges from the man in your life, use the more masculine patterns from United DeSoto. Included are hounds tooth checks, low key stripes, mural like large scale animal patterns, op arts, simulated wood grains and others. And you're sure to find color combinations which are appealing to both you and that rugged he man.

Great Black Americans' Busts New York, N.Y. One of the country's most widely acclaimed public relations pro grams The Ingenious Ameri cans Series sponsored by The Old Taylor Distilling Company. The series features a long list of grea black Americans whose conribuions science, culure, indusry and educaion have placed them in the top rans oi leading Amen cam er domestic chanters an operat i ine Popuiariy of tog guide for establishing socio economic aid committees. Vol unteer advisors are drawn from the management accountants be Old Taylor Program is evidenced! by the thousands of orders for the sculptured bronze busts of the Ingenious Americans which and other financial executives ihave been made available by among the members. company, me Dusts are created by America's great DiacK sculptress, Inge Hardison and are sold at cost $5.00 apiece 8 by the Old Taylor Company.

The busts have proven so popular that it currently takes eight weeks to obtain one. The company is making every effort to expand production faci lities so as to produce them more rapidly but, since each is individually made, this has proven very difficult. i John D. Lethbridge, vice president and marketing director for Old Taylor called it "a frustrating kind of success. All we can do," he said, "is ask our friends to be patient and promise them that the bust will reach them eventually." This is the third year that the Ingenious American Pro gram has been featured in Old Taylor's newspaper and maga local organizations such aszme advertising.

They are also Chambers of Commerce andlfeat.lired in two pocket sized local governments. NAA president, Grant U. Meyers, points out that while many of the applicants will come from minority groups, there is no racial orientation to the program. He notes that about half of the cases handled in Washington were with white businessmen despite the high Negro population of that city. Whereever there are pockets of poverty in the country, Mr.

Meyers commented, there is an opportunity to alleviate the prob lems and aid the local and national economy by helping to establish successful small busi nesses. In addition to aiding the en trepreneur in bookkeeping and booklets which are available from the company without charge. To date, more than 300,000 of these booklets have been distributed. Requests for them come through trade chan nels, from independent individuals, educational institutions, civic, cultural, fraternal, social and religious organizations. The Ingenious Americans Series has prompted imitations by other companies, imitations which the Old Taylor people welcome as contributing to the dissemination of accurate black history.

Among the great black Amer icans included in the Oly Tay lor series thus far are: Benjamin Banneker. Without him the White House might not be on Pennsylvania Avenue. Banneker assumed responsibi lity of defining the boundaries of Washington and of designing and laying out its streets, after the chairman of a committee, appointed by President Wash ing to do the job, resigned and left the city with the plans. Banneker also built the first clock of wood made in Amer ica. Garrett A.

Morgan. It took a disaster of a tunnel explosion trapping over twenty men working 228 feet below Lake Erie to prove the effectiveness of his invention The gas initiator, or gas mask, as we know it today. He also invent ed the electrical traffic light. Granville T. Woods.

His in vention of a telegraph system enabled moving trains to com municate with each other. He also patented over thirty five electrical and mechanical in ventions. Jan Matzeliger. His invention of the lasting machine for mass production of shoes created thousands of new jobs for an operation which had been limited to a few craftsmen. The invention enabled the price of shoes to be cut in half and wages doubled.

INGE HARDISON, NOTED SCULPTRESS and some of the busts she has done for Old Taylors Distilling Company. The company tion of an automatic lubricator a container with a tiny stop clock which regulated the continuous flow of oil on haavy mmachinery eliminated the need to stop the work of these machines for lubricating purposes. In time, people inspect ing new machines would ask, "Is it the real McCoy?" His name has become part of our language, and his inventions (over fifty) are part of our lives. Andrew J. Beard.

Maiming or amputation of the right arm of workers having to drop a coup ling pin to join railroad cars was halted by his invention of the "Jenny Coupler," an automatic device which did the work. Matthew A. Henson. (Bottom row, center, above) The first man to set foot on the North Pole. He was a member of Lt.

Robert E. Peary's renowned arctii expedition and wan. able to calculate the course to the Pole when Peary became ex hausted and crippled from frost bite. (Bottom row, right above) Founder of Provident Hospital in Chicago, developer of Freed men's Hospital in Washington, D.C, and creator of its school of nursing, is best known as the first surgeon in Amerua to operate successfully on the heart Norbert RilHeax. (Top row, right, above.) All of our lives have been made sweeter as a result of his development of the process that turned sugarcane juice into a finer grade of sug ar at about one half the cost current in the early 1840's, Charles Richard Drew.

(Top row. left, above.) He found a way to save lives by creating a method of storing blood plas ma by type for blood transfo sions Lewis Latimer. (Bottom row, left, above.) From his improvement of an impractical incandescent lamp invented by Thomas Edision, the world to Elijah J. McCoy. His invtn day has the electric light iiiiiif IllilBil TaiilSIte (III IP has been deluged with reqnests for the busts at $5.00 each.

Pursuit Of Thinness Can Become Disease By LOUISE CHASE Women's Medical News Service London (WMNS) The pur suit of thinness can become a sickness. An article in the British Medical Journal says that teenage girls are particularly prone to "anorexia nervosa," a form of nervous lack of appetite that seems to be caused by an adolescent's obsessive desire to retain her little girl figure. Although the illness occasionally appears among older, women and among men, the article says tnat most patients are bright, athletic teenagers with well to do parents. Why should a girl find food so loathsome? Most doctors believe that she is subconsciously trying to avoid growing up by cases recover spontaneously without a doctor being consulted. Severe cases can be dangerous.

As many as 15 out of 100 stricken girls have died, some researchers report. Treatment normal teenagers. A study of senior high school girls in Massachusetts reveals that they consistently overestimate the calories in starches and sweets and underestimate the number of calories in meats and eggs. Faced with paired portions of food, one consisting of potatoes or macaroni and the other consisting of a hamburger or a pork chop, the girls consistently picked the starches as most fattening. In reality, each, meat portion bad 50 100 calories more than the carbohydrate sample.

Although the researchers warn against automatically cutting down on meats, they do suggest that this demonstrated bias in estimating calories may interfere with weight reducing. Calories do count, they say. starving uei sen tugugn avoid a mature figure. Fre iNllhlirDa.ll quenuy, iooa is an overwnetm ing concern within the family circle, and other members of the family may be overweight Teen Dates Childhood feeding problems 1 have also been implicated. iXrvi iio vi va Dr.

Daniel Hale The medical journal suggests TfUUioUiiit that the teenage appetite disorder "probably occurs fairW Chioagj (WMNS) By hig frequently" but that most mild scnooi graduation, one out of 10 suburban middle class boys has lost his virginity. By the end of the freshman year in college, three out of 10 boys are' sexually experienced. This emerges from an inten is difficult. "The individ a 1 sive simy 01 epical aaoiescent with anorexia nearosa is a re bys bv D' er' lnotonf nation uooiiu nPPHino psychiatrist, who believes "111 to stay as she is (and) usually brought protestingly along by her mother," the article notes. In an extreme case, forcing her to gain weight may cause self in duced vomiting or severe depression.

However, the article says that skillful, intensive care has led to recovery in two out of three cases. Psychotherapy involving the entire family is often necessary. When under the spell of her phobia, the teenager regards starches with particular revulsion, and will go to great lengths to avoid eating any. that his findings accurately mir ror the experiences ot about one third of the middle class teenage papulation. "The normal adolescent does not experiment much with sexuality," Dr.

Offer found. Most boys waited until their junior year of high school to' begin dating and, even then, their dates were infrequent. Since many students are apparently dismally ignor ant about birth control methods, the xually inexperienced equate intercourse and pregnancy. They also worry about In this, the sick youngster being mature enough to handle shares a misconception with sexual intimacy. FOR THE ACTIVE SET There's a whale of a differ ernce 'tween yesterday's shorts and todays grouser It's hard to picture these adorable Crompton corduroy outfits as vest and skirts or skirts and blouse sets but they are.

The very newest sports outfit. outfit, lounging outfits, or whatever you want to wear them for. Left, Boe Jest uses a pale shade of Crompton's thick and thin wide wale corduroy for this peppy brass buttoned weski and matching trouser skirt. Center the cardigan and the short trouser skirt are both strong fashion items for Fall. Personal Sportswear combines the two looks in the cardigan influenced vest and pantskirt.

Max Aien has these on its racks. Right, Austin Hill Limited tailors Crompton's off white wide wale corduroy in a handsome trouser skirt for the active ladies and teams it with a dark belt and shirt. This too may be found in Pittsburgh as well as in smart shops across the country..

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About New Pittsburgh Courier Archive

Pages Available:
64,064
Years Available:
1911-1977