The voice. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1946-195?, July 26, 1951, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Social Briefs
Mr. and Mrs. Roland W. Young
have returned from a ten-day mo
tor trip to Detroit, Mich., where
they visited their daughter and
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Brown and their children. While
there they went to Canada, where
they toured The Surf ciub as
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Stith.
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. George Randol
and Mrs. Clyde W. Malone mo
tored to Minneapolis over the
week-end where they were the
guests of Mrs. Malone’s sisters
in-law, Mrs. Bruce Lucas and
Mrs. Harry Ormes.
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Dean left
Sunday for Chicago, I1L, where
they will be the guests of Mrs.
Mabel Hawkins. While there they
will see the White Sox play.
* • »
Mr. and Mrs. Olile Furgerson
of California stopped in Lincoln
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wy
att Williams enroute to Chicago,
111., where they will reside. Mr.
and Mrs. Furgerson are former
Linconites.
• * *
Mr. and Mrs. Donson Thelmon
had as their dinner guests re
cently, Mrs. Frances Green and
daughters, Carolyn and Beatrice.
Mrs. Lottie Foreman of Camden,
Ark., and Mrs. Ruby Edwards .
and grandsons, Pete and Gerald
Davis of Detroit, Mich. Mrs. Fore
man and Mrs. Edwards are the
house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ber
lin Dandridge. Mrs. Foreman is
the mother of Mrs. Dandridge and
Mrs. Edwards.
• • *
Mrs. Lillian Rife left Saturday
to spend a week in Denver, Colo.
• * •
Mrs. Helen Gill has recently re
turned from Topeka, Kas., where
she was visiting friends and rela
tives.
• • •
Miss Emma White is spending
several weeks in California visit
ing friends and relatives.
• * *
Dr. J. Donald Butler and his
wife and three children stopped
in Lincoln to visit Miss Jane Mol
den. Dr. Butler, professor at
Princeton, N. J., is on a tour of the
United States. He is also on the
AUTO PARTS
MOTOR REBUILDING
MOTOR EXCHANGE
BEN'S NEW WAY
AUTO PARTS
2018-2024 "O” St. Ph. 2-7039
“9 out of 10 your ’•«*» bet
m Ben*
For EveryHiing in
HARDWARE
Baker Hardware
101 No. 9tfa 2-3710
n. o. mcfipm I
Cleaners 4k Tailors
■
Specialize In Hand-Weaving
301 No. 9th Phone 2-5441
SMITH
Phormacy
2146 ?tne
Prescriptions — Drags
• Fountain — Sundries
Phono 2-1*5*
FASHION-OF-WEEK
VERTICAL PLEATINQ from
neckline to hem edde new fashion
interest to this shantung scroll
print for spectator pr sports. "
committee that is trying to secure
a new trial for the Trenton Six.
* * *
Miss Joyce Williams spent the
week-end in Omaha visiting
friends and relatives.
Annapolis Graduate
Assigned to Panama
By A. E. Villiers
BALBOA, Canal Zone—(ANP)
—Believed to be the first Negro
Naval officer to be assigned to the
Canal Zone, Annapolis* first Ne
gro graduate will report for duty
with the Commandant 15th Naval
District some time in September, i
it was learned here last week.
When You Need
PAINTS
GLASS
MIRRORS
WALLPAPER %
PAINTERS' SUPPLIES
Kemtember the:
Van Sickle Glass and Paint Co.
113 South 10th St.3-6931 Lincoln, Nebr.
««BM riDItAl DEPOSIT MOUMOI OOtTOEATIOS
10th and O St._ Since 1871
PARRISH MOTOR CO.
The home of clean aoai eon.
120 No. 19 St.
Walcott-Charles Rematch
To Be Held Sept. 26
PITTSBURGH, Pa. — (ANP)—
Newly crowned heavyweight
champion Jersey Joe Walcott will
have to whip deposed champion
Ezzard Charles again in Septem
ber if he wants to keep his crown.
The tentative date for the bout
is Sept. 26, and the probable site
is the Polo Grounds in New York
although Pittsburgh and Detroit
still hope to get the fight.
Walcott at 37 became the oldest
man over to win the heavyweight
championship, Wednesday night,
when he knocked out Ezzard
Charles in :55 of the 7th round
after leading all the way.
With a beautiful left hook, the
new champion kayoed the old one
in one mighty blow. Charles fell
flat on his face, tried weakly to
arise at nine, then dozed on back
to sleep.
A crowd of 28,272 fans, the
largest of the year to see a boxing
bout, paid $245,004.49 to see the
first heavyweight championship
bout ever held in Pittsburgh. Eight
television companies paid $100,000
for radio and television rights to
the sensational battle held at
Forbes field.
In taking the championship,
Walcott climaxed five attempts to
win. Four previous times he lost
—twice to Joe Louis and twice to
Charles. In his first loss to Louis,
he floored the Brown Bomber
wtice, bui; lost the decision when
two judges voted against him and
the referee voted for him.
The second time out, however,
Louis flattened him in 11 rounds
and retired.
Walcott lost two decisions to
Charles, one in Comiskey Park,
Chicago, to give Charles the title,
and the second in Detroit when
he made the champion look bad.:
|
---
Union League
Refuses Food
(Continued from Page One)
he first was troubled by race
haters when white mobsters tried
to set his new home in Oak Park,
a Chicago suburb, afire.
He had nroved there to be nearer,
■ — - - - - _i
~ HOUSEHOLD HINTS
By Mrs. Brevy Miller Phone 2-4051
Fresh Fruit Salad
4 slices pineapple
4 slices avacado pear
Vi cup French dressing
1 tablespoon lemon Juice
Vi teaspoon salt
Mix all ingredients and chill 1
hour. Serve on lettuce leaves.
Old Fashioned Brownies
lVi cups sifted cake flour
1 teaspoon salt
Vi teaspoon soda
1 Vi cups sugar
6 egg yolks, beaten until thick and
lemon colored
2 Vi squares unsweetened chocolate, melted
1 cup sour heavy cream
1 cup broken walnut meeds
1 teaspoon vanilla
Sift flour once, measure, add
soda and salt, and sift three times.
Add gradually sugar to egg yolks
beating thoroughly; then choco
late and blend. Add flour, alter
nately with cream, a small
amount at a time- beating after
each addition until smooth. Add
nuts and vanilla. Turn into
greased tiny cup-cake pans, fill
ing them about two-thirds full.
Bake in moderate oven (350 de
grees Fahrenheit) 15 to 20 min
utes. Make four dozen cakes.
Frozen Vegetable Salad
1 cup whipped cream.
H cup salad dressing.
2 teaspoons lemon Juice.
Vi teaspoon salt.
V4 cup paprika.
Vi cup cooked peas.
Vi cup diced celery.
H cup cucumbers.
2 tablespoons chopped pimentos.
1 teaspoon minced onion.
Mix ingredients and allow to
freeze for four hours in a tray
in mechanical refrigerator. Serve
on lettuce and top with more
dressing.
his office. Just a little more than
a month ago, someone exploded a
bomb in his front yard while he
was out of the city to attend the
funeral of his father in Baltimore.
At that time, only his two chil
dren were at home. Dr. Julian
recently commented that it was
costing him $11,000 a year to pay
for private protection for his home
24 hours a day because apparently
law enforcement officials were
not able or were not doing the
job.
Dr. Julian, 51, was named
“Chicagoan of the year” for 1950
for his work in finding medical
aids for arthritis, rheymatic fever,
and other ailments.
The Union League club in Chi
cago dates back to I860. Accord
ing to the Encyclopedia Amer
icana, it is an offshoot of the old
Union League of America, or
ganized by Negroes and whites
during the Civil War.
In the north, the old League
soon died out, and surviving clubs
became private social groups. In
the south during post-Civil War
days, it continued to function as
a political machine to control
Negro votes.
Currently, Union League clubs
have been considered strongholds
of wealthy conservatism, far from
its original principles when they
were interracial.
CLEANING and SANITATION
8UFPLIE3
All Types
Brooms—Furniture Polishes
Mops—Floor Seal and Wax
Sweeping Compounds
Mapping Equipment
Kelso Chemical
117 North 9th St 2-2434
iw^ —-— LINCOLN'S
PENNEY’S
Department Store
Penney’s Own
RONDO PRINTS
• Editing new Fal1 Patterns and m g^
• Easy to sew, beautifully de- /I H B
8igned‘ / I
• Exclusive print*, made only for ZJ_ ^^^B
Penney’s.
*" ght,1'*M' D>1°'* wi“ yd. I
Penney’s Third Floor I