The voice. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1946-195?, August 16, 1951, Page Four, Image 4

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    Social Briefs )
tty Dorothy brat* /
Mrs. Lynnwood Parker spent
the week-end in Omaha visiting
Mrs. and Mrs. Douglas Corbin.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Dunn
and James Estes have recently
returned from a ten-day motor
trip to Lake Minniatonka, Tonka
Bay, Lake Calhone in Minnesota,
Clear Lake and Des Moines, la.,
and Omaha, Neb.
* * *
Harold Brame and daughter,
Jackie, of Rockford, 111., were the
recent house guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Todd.
* * *
The Rev. and Mrs. C. H. Nicks
and their two children of Detroit,
Mich., were scheduled to arrive
in Lincoln Tuesday to spend aj
week as house guests of Mr. and
Mrs. M. Copeland. Rev. Mr. Nicks
a former pastor of Mt. Zion Bap
tist church has been pastoring
in Michigan since leaving Lincoln.
• * *
Mrs. Winifred Henry of Detroit,
Mich., spent several days with(
her aunt, Mrs. W. R. Colley and}
Mr. Colley. Also a guest of thej
Colley’s was Mrs. Gertrude Raf-!
ferty of Omaha, Neb.
* * *
Returning from vacations re
cently were Mrs. W. B. Davis who
spent some time in Denver. Mr.
I. B. Colley who motored to
Illinois, Missouri and Indiana vis
iting friends and relatives and
Mrs. Pansy Beard who spent sev-!
eral weeks in Washington, D. C.,'
with her daughter, Mrs. Barbara
Jefferson and Mr. Jefferson.
* * *
Mrs. J. H. Miller was pleasantly
surprised when she was recently
informed of her winning First and
Second Prizes on entries she sent
to a Gary, Indiana Fair.
* * *
Guests at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Willia Page was Mrs. Pages’
sister, Mrs. Lilly Turnetine of,
Gary, Indiana.
* * *
Mrs. Ida Belle McWilliams andr
ner sister, Mrs. AUie warding have
returned from Omaha and will re-!
main in Lincoln indefinitely.
* * *
Mr. J. T. Bell has returned to
vork after a few weeks of illness.
* * *
Richard Holcomb, son of Mr.
nd Mrs. Ray Halcomb, arrived in'
Lincoln Friday to spend a two-!
week furlough with his parents.
* * *
Mrs. Basilia Bell was recently !
released from Lincoln General 1
___ i
For Better Valuea
• Drugs
• Cosmetics
• Stationery
• Candy
• Prescriptions
CHEAPPER ORUGS
1325 O St. Lincoln
Rep. Powell to
Study Abroad
For Congress
| WASHINGTON —(ANP)—
Cong. Adam Clayton Powell, Jr.
; (D., N. Y.) has been designated by
the house committee on education
and labor to make a four-month
tour abrad where he will study
the labor and employment situa
tion in a rfumber of foreign coun
tries.
Leaving the country the latter
part of this month, the New York
congressman expects to visit Eu
rope, Africa, Israel and Palestine
before returning the first of next
year.
Rep. Powell will be accom
panied on the trip by his wife,
Hazel Scott Powell and their son,
Adam Clayton Powell III.
Mrs. Powell will appear in a
piano recital at the Palladium in
London in September.
Hospital where she received sur
gery.
* * *
Mrs. Harry Peterson is visiting
her parents in Brookfield, Mo.
She was accompanied by her chil
dren, Donna and Jerry.
* * *
Mrs. Thelma Rutherford has re
turned to Washington D. C. after
spending a vacation with her
mother, Mrs. Wm. Hammonds
and other relatives.
* * *
Little Miss Louise Gordan,
[ dapghter of Mrs. Melvina Gordan,1
celebrated her 3rd birthday with'
a picnic party in Antelope Park.
Guests included Gwen and Llew
ellyn Bowler, Pat Johnson, Steph-!
anie Cooke, Gloria Jean Williams, *
Nadine and Margaret Jean Dan-j
dridge and Sandra Qualls.
* * *
Mrs. Hazel Wilson was called1
out of the city recently due to
the death of her mother.
* * *
Misses Delight Killenger and
Donna Adcock, who have been!
attend school in Iowa City, Iowa,':
stopped at the home of Rev. and
Mrs. M. L. Shakespeare Saturday
evening enroute to Hasting’s
| Fash ion-Of-Week
!$ss ' , ' Jp *
"
A romantic Indian print in red,
white and black for this Paris
styled two-piece dress.
Dist. Judge Upholds Kas.
Segregated School Law
TOPEKA, Kas.—(ANP) — An
attempt by parents oi Negro chil
dren in this city to end segrega
tion in public schools was quashed
last week when a United States
district judge upheld a Kansas
law permitting segregation of
school children in the first six
grades.
Judge Walter A. Huxman held
that educational opportunities for
Negro and white children in the
first six grades were comparable.
However, the court found that
segregation of white and Negro
children in public schools had a
“detrimental effect upon the col
ored children.”
Negro parents had sought to
have the segregated school law
declared unconstitutional.
CLEANING and SANITATION
8UPPLIES
Ail Types
Brooms—Furniture Polishes
Mops—Floor Seal and Was
Sweeping Compounds
Mopping Equipment
Kelso Chemical
• 11 North 9th St. 2-2434
VINE ST.
MARKET
GROCERIES & MEATS
22nd and Vine
2-8583 — 2-6584
.mm
law
Your City
Light Department
The Nebraska
Typewriter Co.
125 No. 11th Lincoln
2-2157
Royal Typewriters
Mimeograph • Duplicators
Dictaphones - Clary Adders
Sold - Rented - Repaired
Flowers By Tyrrell's
O. I, TyrrelTs Plotters
6 2357 1133 No. Cotnor
Where Your Furniture Dollar Buys More
1S32 O Street
Shurtleff's Furniture Co.
| HOUSEHOLD HINTS
By Mr*. Brev> Miller Phone 2-4051
Ham Loaf, Serving Two
1 V4 cups diced chopped green
cooked ham pepper
1 egg yolk 1 tablespoon
1 egg.hard cooked chopped onion
V4 teaspoon salt '4 cup soft bread
M teaspoon paprika crumbs
*4 teaspoon celerv 2 tablespoons fat.
salt melted
1 tablespoon Mi cup milk
Mix ingredients and pour into
buttered, medium sized baking
pan and bake 30 minutes in mod
erate oven. Unmold and surround
with savory sauce.
PRANKPURTRR VKr.NTAHLR SALAD
V4 n>. frankfurters (about 4>
3 cups cooked, cubed potatoes
1 cup cooked new peas
t cup cooked green beuus, cut hi 1-inck
lengths
I cun cooked, sliced new beets
I cup chopped celery
Vi cup sliced green onions
3 medium tomatoes, cut In eighths
1 head romaine or lettuce
Vi cop French dressing
'At cup sour cream
Plunge frankfurters into boiling water and
cook until plump (about 5 minutes). Cool in
cooking water. Peel and slice crosswise into
Mi-inch lengths. Heap in center of large salad
bowl. Circle with vegetables placed in groups,
then outline with lettoce. broken up into bite
size pieces. Combine French dressing and
sour cream. Drizzle over salad. Toss lightly
and quickly. Serve immediately with toasted
French bread. Four to 6 servings.
Salmon Salad Sandwich Filling
V4 lb. tin pink or rad caiman
1 tablespoon salmon Squid
3 tablespoons chopped sweet pickles
1 hard cooked egg. chopped
2 teaspoons granted onion
Vh teaspoon salt
V4 cap salad dressing
Butter for spreading
K thin slices bread
Lemon slices, thin,, peeled
I Remove skin from drained salmon and dis
card. Crush salmon bones and flake the fish.
Add salmon liquid, pickle, egg, onion, salt
'and salad dressing, and blend together thor
oughly. Butter the 8 slices of bread. Lay
| peeled lemon slices evenly over buttered slices
of bread, then spread with salmon filling.
I Serve immediately, or keep covered until ready
| to serve Makes 8 open-faced sandwiches.
Watermelon Salad
Remove the flesh from a ripe,
full-flavored watermelon with ai
teaspoon. Place the pieces, freed
from all seeds, in a bowl of
cracked ice and set them to chillJ
When they are ready to use drain
off the water, sprinkle them with
a little powdered sugar, pour over
I ifirr— -i.
them a glass of ginger ale, and
set them on the ice twenty min
utes to marinate, turning them
often with a fork. Drain the
watermelon, place it on crisp
lettuce leaves and mask it with
white mayonnaise made without
mustard and lightened with
whipped cream. Garnish the salad
with sprays of fresh cress.
Canteloupe Salad.
Choose two firm canteloupes.
Quarter them, remove the flesh
from the rinds and dice it.
Sprinkle the melon with a little
French dressing made with part
lemon juice and part taragon
vinegar. Wash and carefully pre
pare a large cupful of fresh
watercress. Add to it a table
spoonful of finely-cut chives and
a tablespoonful of chopped red
pepper. Drain the melon, mix the
ingredients together lightly and
fill lettuce leaves with the salad,
topping each serving with a
teaspoonful of mayonnaise made
without mustard and with lemon
juice. Garnish this salad with rad
ishes cut rose fashion.
Deep-Dish Peach Pie
10 to 12 ripe peaches. sugar
i .Pir,ed and s*'ced H cup brown sugar
I tablespoon lemon % teaspoon salt
juice 1 tablespoon quick
’s. teaspoon almond * cooking tapioca
extract 1 tablespoon butter
% cup granulated 1 recipe pic crust
Combine peaches, lemon juice,
almond extract, sugars, salt and
tapioca. Mix thoroughly and let
stand while making pastry. Ar
range peaches in baking dish. Dot
with butter.
Roll dough li-inch thick and of
a size to cover baking dish, allow
ing 1 inch all around. Fold in half
and cut several %-inch slits on
fold. Place pastry over peaches in
baking dish, unfold, turn edge un
der and press on rim all around
dish. Bake in hot oven (425*F.)
35 to 45 minutes.
■■
jl
Velvety Soft
Fashion News!
4t 19.1
on/y 1 yard
36-ins. wide
• Checks
• Plaids
—■■
Wonderful corduroy in
smart new patterns for
fall wardrobes. Ideal for
suits, coats, jackets and
children’s wear. Easy
to sew.
Fine Combed
Cordurov
36-ins. -■ qr
w'1« .I85,d.
Soft and silky k> beautiful
solid colors of the season.
Makes solid tone separates
to match with the printed
eorduroy above.
•OLD'S F.brlr. . . . Third Floor
. ' • • ; '
. *
L_—__________
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