The voice. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1946-195?, January 26, 1950, Page Four, Image 4

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    Social Briefs t
By Dorothy H. Greene
Mrs. Obbie Brown is enjoying a
bit of relaxation at home with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. E.
Simms, after a period of employ
ment in the script department of
CBS in New York City, one of
the major networks of the coun
try. Mrs. Brown was one of 14
white collar workers in the sta
tion. The positions were made
possible two years ago through
the intervention of the Radio
Guild. In February, Mrs. Brown
will join her husband who heads
the chemistry department at
Wiley College, Marshall, Tex. Mr.
Brown, twice graduated from the
University of Nebraska, has com
pleted and placed on sale copies
of a book, entitled, “Calucula
tions in General Chemistry.”
A message of sympathy is ex
extended to the Rev. J. B. Brooks,
pastor of Quinn Chapel A.M.E.
church who received word the
past week of the death of his
brother, who died#Tuesday in Los
Angeles, Calif.
George Riley and Charles
Goolsby were dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Grice and family
in Omaha recently.
Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Brooks were
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Horace
Cooke on Friday, Jan. 20.
Miss Freddie Powell spent the
week end with her parents, the
Rev. and Mrs. R. H. Powell. Miss
Powell, a first year student in
nursing at University hospital in
Omaha, has announced to her
friends the capping exercises to
be held Sunday, Feb. 5.
Mrs. Vernon C. Coffey of Kan
838 City, Kas., spent Sunday with
her daughter, Ada, who is in
training at Bryan hospital.
Miss Joyce Williams had friends
in Wednesday evening. After
listening to records the group was
shown a movie by Richard Hol
comb.
* * *
PROUD PARENTS
Mrs. Woody Cooper became a
great grandmother Tuesday, Jan.
17, when her granddaughter and
grandson-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
James Terry became the parents
of a 6V4 pound boy, James
Alfred. Mrs. Terry was Margu
riete Knowles.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl L. Houston
are the proud parents of a girl,
Rita Marie, born Tuesday, Jan. 17.
The Houstons live at 1950 T street.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Elliot
are the proud parents of a baby
boy, Roger Thomas, born Tues
day, Jan. 17.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Simms,
2024 S street, are the proud par
ents of a boy, Terry Lee, born
Jan. 21.
* * *
Mrs. Belle Shakespeare, for
merly of Parsons, Kas., is now
making her home with her son,
the Rev. Melvin L. Shakespeare
at 2225 S street.
The Rev. J. J. Johnson, of Kan
sas City, Kas., was the speaker
at Newman Methodist church
Sunday morning, Jan. 22. Rev.
Johnson is the superintendent of
| the Topeka district. After morn
ing services he left Lincoln to
hold Quarterly Conference with
the Methodist churches of Has
tings and Grand Island. The two
meetings were combined in Grand
Island, Neb.
Misses Robbie and Freddie Pow
ell, daughters of the Rev. and
Mrs. R. H. Powell, were the
luncheon guests of Mrs. Virginia
Johnson Sunday afternoon, Jan.22.
CARD OF THANKS
I wish to thank my many
friends who sent cards,' flowers
and the many other expresisons
of kindness, during my illness.
— Mrs. Betty Lintz, 2230 T St.
FASHION-OF-WEEK
SSk-s- Xi' ~ 'V A v‘ VJ
Back Beauty is featured in this
rayon taffeta date-timer dress.
Color contrast extends from a
front yoke to the V-shaped laced
back.
Ball Stars Make
Dough; Is Branch
Rickey Peeved?
By Alvin Moses.
NEW YORK. (ANP). Some
$92,000 in off-season profits was
sliced into by colored diamond
stars Larry Doby, Roy Campan
ella, Jackie Robinson and “Stormy
Petrel” Don Newcombe. All of
which meant a bit more to the
“deep-freeze-bank” brother New
combe has out Rahway, N. Y. way
This of course compares in no way
whatsoever with the reported
$250,000 (extra-curricular) base
ball earnings of Robinson the year
he added 20 odd pounds to his
swift frame or his 1949 movie
television, etc. earnings. As an
astute business executive, one of
the cleverest in existence Branch
Rickey needs no one to acquaint
him with these factors any more
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Lincoln, Nebr. .
Date
Sirs:
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Name ...
Address .
City and State...• ... •
IJ&sul ClqsL ChaiisUc;
BY ELOISE FINLEY
Hi Teens:
This week I thought I would
give you a few rules for the
girls, later I will help you boys
too.
(a) Never dine alone with a
married man, unless his wife is
your great friend.
(b) Never accept an invitation
through a man to the house of
someone else.
(c) If you have met a man and
his wife together, and the man
asks you to a party at his house,
do not accept; his wife should in
vite you. If she is away, of course,
there is no discourtesy implied,
and if he invites you to a party,
you may accept.
(d) Never encourage stories that
are indecent.
(e) Never allow a man to come
into your apartment if you are
alone in it, or to stay on when
other guests have left.
(f) Never go alone with a man
to his apartment, or stay on in
his apartment when other guests
have gone.
(g) Never go alone with a man
to his hotel room, even if he has
a sitting room.
(h) Never accept a valuable
present from a beau or possible
beau a very old rule and very
sound.
If she follows the above rules,
no young girl could conceivably
be considered fast or cheap. She
could never be misunderstood. If
she refuses an invitation, a drink
or a present in a prim and righte
ous way, she may be considered
stuffy. If she refuses all these
gracefully, with a smile, she will
be thought charming and well
brought up, by the world at large
and, by young men, eminently
wifely material.
than Cleveland’s Hank Greenberg
does. When the mahatma of the
Gowanus Canal directod New
combe to quit his “easy money”
wrestling referee assignments a
fortnight ago, wise men said that
added up to Rickey-mad?
Then when Washington, D. C.,
newsman glibly wrote that New
combe’s 1950 salary demands
would be a trifle in excess of !
Jackie Robinson’s $20,000 (1949)
drawn down for six months work
that was really something to wire
home about.
Get as much as you can while
you are jroung and at your best
Don, for it would be real dumb
not to think in such business
terms. While accomplishing all
this bear in mind whom you work
for at present. Mr. Rickey is a
s t o ckholders’ front-office-man
first and always. This will not
prevent his being eminently fair
(we hope, we hope) but even
Samson (not Victor Mature)
couldn’t make the ex-St. Louis
Sunday school superintendent
move an inch above what he
thought a player was worth even
if the full weight of every class
“A” baseball writer in the nation
were in your corner.
46 Years
13th & O
National Bank
of Commerce
Lincoln, Nebraska
Member F.DJ.C.
If You Have A Bad Break!
CALL: 2-6931
And We’ll Fix It For You —
Van Sickle Glass & Paint Co.
143 So. 10th Lincoln. Nebr.
f HOUSEHOLD HINTS ii
| IN !Vlr- lire*» Mille. Phone 2-4051
Chocolate Chip Nut Bars
1 cup sifted cake flour
Ms teaspoon double acting baking powder
>4 teaspoon salt
% teaspoon soda
M cup outter
1 cup brown sugar, packed
1 egg, slightly beaten
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 package chocolate chips
1 cup chopped walnut meats
Sift flour once, measure, add
baking powder, salt, and soda
and sift again. Cream butter, add
sugar and cream together until
light and fluffy. Add egg and
vanilla and mix. Add flour grad
ually, mixing well after each ad
dition. Then add chocolate chips
and nuts. Turn into greased shal
low pan. Bake in moderate oven
(350) about 30 minutes. Cut into
bars or squares. Remove from
plan and cool on cake rack.
Makes about 20 bars.
Cube*! Steak With
Vegetables
1 pound steak, cubed
3 medium onions
1 green pepper
M cup fat
5 carrots
2 cups celery
1 can tomato soup
Salt, pepper
Brown the cubes of steak in
the hot fat, add the onion and
green pepper and when slightly
browned, add the tomato soup,
celery and carrots. Cover and
cook very slowly—45 minutes.
Serve on a large platter, spa
ghetti, noodles or dumplings form
ing the center.
Stuffed Celery Hearts
Jar of Roquefort spread
Cream
Tender celery hearts
Few seeded raisins, chopped
Paprika
Soften Roquefort spread with
a little cream. Blend thoroughly.
Spread in celery hearts—a pastry
decorating tube make an artistic
'***^1
"Family Laundry
I a specialty" i
t f
I Lincoln Laundry Co. j
t 2208 O Street Phone 2-5111 !
f,jh
>JBk
msm
Your City
Light Department
Jess
Williams
Springs
job. Garnish with raisins. Dust
with paprika.
Salad Supreme
1 quart cranberries (ground)
116 cups sugar (cook together)
1 package lemon jello
1 small can pineapple
16 cup sugar (cook together)
One cup hot water, (mix also 24
marshmallows before cooling.
One pint whipped cream after
chilling and place in icebox. Serve
on lettuce leaves.
Stuffed Onions.
Serves 8
Peel 8 medium onions
Cook, partially, 20 minutes. Drain,
cool.
Remove centers.
Combine:
2 cups bread crumbs
y2 cup chopped bacon
1 teaspoon poultry seasoning
y4 cup centers from onions,
chopped
1 tablespoon green pepper
Brown in y2 cup butter
Stuff onions with above mixture.
Sprinkle tops with
y2cup grated cheese
Brush onions with melted butter
Pour 1 cup heavy cream in shal
low baking dish
Place onions in cream.
Bake about 40 minutes at 350°.
Garnish with pimiento strips.
CLEANING and SANITATION
* SUPPLIES
All Types
Brooms—Furniture Polishes
Mops—Floor Seal and Wax
Sweeping Compounds
Mopping Equipment
Kelso Chemical
117 North 9th St 2-2434
Hompes Tire
and
Used Car Lot
1928 0 St.
Reconditioned and
Guaranteed Used Cars
Or New Hudson 6 and 8s
1701 N St. Phone 2-6524
LET
DONLEY STAHL CO
1331 N St.
B—UR—DRUGGIST
.ROSE MANOR
| STUDIO
1421 O Street
Phone 2-2247
Portraits by Appointment
George Randol. P A. of 4
I Work guaranteed
Prices reasonable