Social Briefs j Visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Partick last week were Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Sawyers of Chillicothe, Missouri. Mrs. Saw yers is Mrs. Patrick’s sister. Also two nieces, Mrs. Lola Peterson of New York City and Mrs. Mar jorie Parker of Chillicothe, Mo. * * * Guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Moore on Friday eve ning were Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Cruder and Mr. and Mrs. Lynn wood Parker. * * * The baby contest sponsored by the Lincoln Urban League will end August 8th. A very fine pro gram has been planned under the direction of Mrs. Lenora Letcher. It will mainly feature youngsters age 8 to 12. The program will be held at Newman Methodist church. * * * % The Business and Professional Girls club of the Y.W.C.A. spent Sunday in Hastings, Nebr. Miss Frances Lewis is president of the club. * * * Mr. Joseph Green has returned from Chicago, III,, after spending ] over two months as guest of his1 son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and1 Mrs. William Green. * * * Accompaning Mrs. Farmer from | • Omaha on Sunday were Mr. and ■ Mrs. Charles Jones and Mrs. Mag- i gie Walls. Mrs. Farmer was guest speaker at Quinn Chapel’s Wom en’s Day Program on Sunday morning. I* Mrs. H. W. Peterson and chil dren left on Saturday to spend three weeks with Mrs. Peterson’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Boggs, in Brookfield, Mo. * * * Little Barbara Adams celebrated Every Item in Our Entire EAST WINDOW OFF CHEAPPER DRUG STORE * 1325 "O” 8L Bishop Walker Visits Churches Bishop D. Ormonde Walker, presiding bishop of the fifth Episcopal district preached Sun day morning at the St. Peter’s | A.M.E. church, Kansas City, Kas., Rev. Esther Randall, pastor; Sun day afternoon, Mariah Walker Mission, Rev. Bertha Kelley, pas Itor and Sunday night at the St. jLuke A.M.E. church, Rev. Grady Brown, pastor. 'j For two weeks, Bishop Walker has been visiting the mission churches of the Kansas-Nebraska, Southwest-Missouri and Kansas conferences. He has been the speaker of the hour at churches in Independence, Kas., Coffeyville, and Topeka. Sunday morning, July 6, Bishop Walker preached at the St. Paul A.M.E. church. Independence, , Rev. L. P. Parker, pastor. Sunday | night, he preached at Cain Me morial A.M.E. church, using as his subject. “Woe Is Me. If I Preach Not The Gospel.” her seventh birthday on Saturday afternoon with 15 of her friends. She received many lovely gifts. * * * Mr. James Lewis will be leav ing soon for Pasadena, California, where he made his home before coming to Lincoln. * * * The Rev. John Adams. Nebraska Senator was in the city on Wed nesday on business. Reunion (Continued from Page 2) j evoked at the sight of baby dresses belonging to Mrs. Anna Coffee—especially the remains of her christening dress made and worn in 1881. Sunday, ninety relatives and friends gathered from far and near, bringing with them every thing from “soup to nuts.” They hailed from Omaha and Lincoln, Nebraska; Kansas City, Mo.; To peka, Silver Lake, Circleville, Sunflower, Holton, and Horton, Kansas; Newport, Minn.; Newark, N. J.; and Blythe, California. Lincolnites attending the affair were Mrs. Marie Copeland and daughter, Marlene; Mrs. Tillie I Miller; Mrs. Ida Hassel; and Mrs. j Edna Hammond. Other visitors well known here were Russell Le Vell and wife, SaRa Ann (McWil jliams) Pollard and son,. Sherman of Blythe, California. Before the big repast on Sun day, an exceptional array of tal-| ent brought joy to an appreciative audience. Compositions for two pianos were given by Mrs. Ruth McWilliams and her sister, Mrs. • Shorter Lengths • Fuller Sweeps • Luxurious Colors FEATURED GROUP 199.50 plus tu •. Choose -jour fur now from all new stocks. Fur coats, capes, cape-stoles and cape jackets. An outstanding collection. GOLD’S Fmr galea . . . Second Fleer By Miss Mary Sampson 2811 S. 24 — 3-62l£ Mi Mrs. Odessa Johnson Miss Sampson U1# 4 **• ” Mrs. Johnson Homemade Peach Ice Cream Ideal Summer Fare . " HI I mil Hill Ilium ■■■Ill nil ■■■■ —I,.. No matter how high the mer cury climbs, you’ve still got to eat. This daily occurence can be taken care of in a fairly easy fashion if you stick to simple but substantial fare that’s easy on the palate and easy on you as chef. You can begin the meal with canned jellied consomme, follow through with a big seafood salad bowl, and end with heaping plates of homemade ice cream bedecked with frozen peaches. Nowadays homemade ice cream is a very popular item as dessert courses go. It is so quick and easv especially when it is made with sweetened condensed milk since it is stirred only once in the making. What’s more you only need one cup of cream added to the sweetened condensed milk to have a smooth, creamy ice cream. The recipe is virtually failure-proof even if you’re a novice at ice cream making. Sweetened condensed milk which is a rich combination of whole milk and sugar blends perfectly with the other ingredients to give you « really smooth ice cream minus those pesky “ice splinters” that sometimes turn up in the best ice cream. Sweetened condensed milk Photo courtesy Borden’s comes in a 15 ounce can and is wonderful for making candies and cookies as well as puddings and pies. If you would like a copy of a booklet containing 70 easy re cipes that work like magic, drop a postcard to Borden's, Dept. Y-R, Box 175, New York, 46. FRESH PEACH ICE CREAM •(Makes about 1*4 pints) *4 cup (*4 can) sweetened con densed milk *4 cup water 1 cup crushed fresh or frozen peaches *4 cup sugar, about 1 cup heavy cream Set refrigerator control at cold est point. Combine sweetened con densed milk and water. Chill. Sweeten peaches to taste. Stir into milk mixture. Whip cream to custard-like consistency. Fold into chilled mix ture. Pour into freezing tray. Cover tray with waxed paper. Freeze to a firm mush (about 1 hour). Turn into chilled bowl. Break up with fork then beat with rotary beater until fluffy but not melted. Quickly return to tray, cover tray with waxed paper. Return to freezing unit. Freeze until firm. Alice Coffee, also by Mrs. Mc-Wil-i liams and her youngest daughter, Faith Adrienne. Vocal offerings were by Kendall McWilliams and his sister, SaRa Ann LeVell. Group singing continued through out the afternoon and evening and ran the gamut from popular to classic numbers, including old hymns and spirituals. The high spot was possibly the singing of the Negro National Anthen and the “Hymn of Brotherhood”—the sentiment of which has, through VINE ST. MARKET GROCERIES & MEATS 22nd and Vine 2-6583 — 2-6584 BEAL'S GROCERY Fresh Fruits & Vegetables Meats 2101 R TeL 2-6933 out the years, been the guiding light of the VanDerzee family. Where Your Furniture Dollar Buys More 1532 O Street Shurtleff's Furniture Co. QUESTION: 1 am planning to make a few room* in a walk-in basement. Would like to know the best end cheapest way to insulate the floor and walls. I plan to put down a rough wood floor, and plaster board on the walls. Have bean advised to use tar and tar-paper. Do you think this is a good idea? I think it would giva oB an odor. « -F.S.. New York City v.uawgW'SHI ANSWER: If you plan a wood floor, it would probably be better to have no insulation beneath it. Air circulation below would take care of any alight moisture, normal with concrete floors. Furring strips on walls also provide air spac# behind plaster board, which would taka care of moisture at this point. You can lay tar paper if you wish withov* worry about the odor. QUESTION: Will you please advise me on how to finish a white oak chest which I have just finished? Wish to obtain a satin-like finish with the natural grain showing. -C.L., Toronto ANSWER: Build up several coats of shellac and rub down with FFF grsds pumice. Ues a heavy cloth pad for rubbing. Sprinkle the surface with pumice, wet and wring out the cloth, make all strokes in the tame direction. If you want to mark the grain in whitg, rub a white filler across the grain before the shellac is applied, then continue as above. Use a coat of wax to finish off either method. QUESTION: Do you know of any cure for ants? We have a camp in the country and are bothered with them. 4 —P.S.B., Peterson, N. J. ANSWER: Best control developed so far la the use of clordane, dusted in powder foam on visible ant hills, and spread in thin un broken lines around door and window sills and other points of entry to the house. —