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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 29, 1945)
( THURSDAY, NOV. ?9, 1945 THE JOURNAL, PLArfSMOUTtf, NEBRASKA PAGE FIVE Mothers Asked to Help GFs Keep Food Habits They Learned in Army Steaks ;Are. Back Again ! ! The me?? sergeant can't teach mother how to cook, hut he can tell something: about the new food habit her boy learned in camp. enoujrh to make it necessary to completely revise the army menu. Chief discovery: meat and mash ed potatoes aren't the whole an?- Telling what balanced diets didiwer, as they were in the la?t war. I for our soldiers and ursinj; them not to lose their new habits. Mc Call's says: 'If you could sit down for a heart-to-heart talk with your sol- For now, if given the chance, 5ft to 75 percent of OIc choose salad too something that never would have happened them. "These foods rate high: Fluid flier's mess sergeant, he could i milk and ice cream; fruits and give you a few tins on how the juices: ready-to-serve cereals; t Army's Quartermaster Corp. kept j combination your boy healthy and sent him home often 15 pounds heavier. F.ven more, he could tell you some things that would surprise you about new foods your boy has learned to like. "He'd say: Your boy eats more different foods now than he did before things that are good for hirn and that he ought to go on ating. Like fluid milk that was a five-star favorite in the Army. It's up to you to keep him eating them, if you want to keep hirn alads of fruit and vegetables: Cabbage and pine apple; Apple, orange and celery; j Kaw carrots and raisins. Another popular salad is lettuce and to mato with a good dressing. One i man just returned from Iceland : ate two whole heads of lettuce, : first thing. "You're in a position to make anything you serve more appe tizing than army food. but if you're an intelligent wife or moth er, plan your family's food along the lines of the thinking behind ilthy. Give him these other tne army feeding. You should ser- 5i he foods rieht away, along: with his old home favorites, so he won't lose his taste for them. "Vfe say, in the Army, that it takes three months to set up a new food habit, but only two weeks to lose it.' '.Most of the changes in your boy's food habits are due to what the Army gave him to eat in amp in the continental United States. Soldiers today get a widely varied, balanced diet: milk to drink, fresh vegetables and fiuit, eg;r and cheese, a variety of meats and poultry, bacon and fish; as well as cereals, bread stuffs, dried vegetables and fruit?, fats, sugar, spices and beverages, Vegetables salads and a variety of meats were strange new experi ences to many GEs lots of men had never tasted fluid miik since they were babies. "A lot of the unfamiliar foods didn't take. But the average sol dier who returned to a redistribu tion center here for reprocessing, after months of hard rations over seas, had shifted his food likes , lor nearly X U Ui cux, an vvi i-i t hailed the recent UrA liDeranzation 01 meat rationing. auu, uonx iMcW'hirt, CBS actress, deliberates before buying a big, juicy f-teak as her butcher cheerluiiy exhibits cnoice cuts. Aitnougn sicuks are muic plentiful, Mr. Butcher handles meat with care, placing it on waxed (paper to assure sanitation, wrapping it as though his fair customer !ttill paid precious points. - ve meals that are not onlv accept able, but meals that are always nutritionally adequate. ''The foundation of eating-to-keep-healthy is: plenty of milk and milk products, like ice cream and cheese; different kinds of meat and poultry; fish and other sea food; fresh vegetables, salads and fruit, especially citrus fruits and tomatoes; eegs; cereals and breadstnffs; butter or fortified margarine. "You cook a thousand times better than an army cook. But plan your meals so that your whole family eats as well as your bov did when he was a soldier." ow ova wax f v 1. V WillUmi J.Howard Davis Insurance Income Tax Service THETA EEOS ELECT The regular meeting of t li -Theta Rho Girls club was held on Wednesday evening in the I.O.O.F. hall. The sem i-aninlal election of officers was held with the follow ing being selected for officers: Doris Finn f roi k. president; Jackie Krejci, vice president. K:'.tule-n Snyder, secretary: Flor ence Haswell. treasurer. Flans j were made for the initiation of I several new members to be held in January at the regular anni versary celebration. i:!i-THE TWISTED ( PNC- TM V 1 LL ? '. lr !;, HORKJ -- OV E E. Tf-iE LOST 1 The T. . EV C'C ) .' THEKE.' HOW ! f-F.AKj'.S Hi! FMr 7 i' MICH WILL vOO J IS5 TH' Tt"?TtD J I'VE WVD 1 HWM.' WE CrCT t 1 ? MUCH WILL OU :;-. TAk.E Fo; it : ; HL'VDRrD-TWO HUNDRED TH' ;C1EHDVV lMiM It mm THE TtSCOn S3 Airlines Plan Educational Job Throughout U. S. WASHINGTON Formation of a nationwide organization of commercial airline representatives; to carry on educational activities in "srrass roots' sections of the United States was announced here recently by Air Transport A : sociation of America. Dividing the United States in ! to six divisions - chairmen and vice chairmen have been appoint i ed in each state to supervise the I educational work. Several hund i red airline representatives have j been selected to carry on the i activities involved in any educa tional program. j Tne new airlines organization; was set up by a Special Commit-j jee on Governmental Regulation; of which 0. M. Mosier, Vice Presi-i dent of American Airlines, Inc.,: is Chairman. This Specia.l Com-j mittee is a Sub-Committee of Air( Transport Association's State Be-1 lations Department, of which t Harry Meixeell is Director. ' Mr. Mosier also heads Disivion ! I of the new ATA unit. Other) Chairmen of the Divisions (who' also serve as members of the' Special Committee on Govern-: mental Regulation ( ace: E. . Smythe Gambrell. General Coun sel of Eastern Air Line, Inc.,! Division II; Russell Cantwell, ! Executive Assistant of Transcon tinental & Western Air, Inc., Div ision III; Robert M. Averill, As- j sistant to the President of Pen-" nsylvania-Central Airlines, Divis-, in IV; A. E. Kloan. Secretary of Northwest Airlines, Inc., Division V; and Hainer Hinshaw, Asistant to the President of United Air Lines, Inc., Dilvision VI. TBI JCTUML'f ' Daily Pattern LT0W8 Journal Want Ads For Results IIIIGl III Make your shopping easy from our large, well assorted stock all now on display- Ciits or Him Shaving Sets, Tilled Cases Fountain Pens Cigarette Lighter Pipe and Rack Games Stationery Gifts for Her Toilet Sets Perfume Sets Compacts Make-up Boxes Cologne Sets Mirror Sets Chocolates FOR CHILDREN Games - Toys - Trucks - Blocks Model Planes - Telephones - Books and many other interesting gift items Traffic Deaths Are Increasing CHICAGO. Nov. L'f. (UP' The National Safety CounVil. tiling a rapidly in-reasinp traffic dead; toll, warned Thursday that .- this country "is paying an inflation ary price in human litv for the war traffic spree." privilege of indulging in a post Traffic accidents are "geiti'iisr out iff control." it said. October Toll The council reported that traf fic deaths throughout the nation went up 5o 'per ecnt itt fHtoht r over the same month a year ago and said that the toll for the first ten months of the year was 14 per cent nighr than in 1044. The October death toll of '.1.4 4 0 compares with a total of-.1,30.1 dead and missing in the attack on Pearl Harbor. Disgrace '"The nation becomes propel ly alarmed over Pearl Harbor in flation or' almost aytliing: else that results in excessive loss of life or money," Ned 11. Dearborn, council president, said. 'Hut it accep'.s with a shrug of the should er and an amazing complacency an accident toll that is a dis grace to a civilized country." Reports from .141 cities showed j only ill with a decrease in traffic accidents over October of last M;u Eifility-seveii reported in- i leases and 1!'' no change. For the ten-month period, the council jsaid, 117 i iih-s indie rued inc reases, i l r,i. u-creasv. and CO no 'change. Ramse! Funeral Saturday, Dec. 1 Mrs. Mathilda Ramsel, 54. died Wednesday. November 28 at 8 o'clock in the morning at the St. Catherine's hospital in Omaha. . Mathilda Anna Ramsel was horn in Plattsmouth, November .10, 1891, the daughter of Mr. and Mr?. Henry Kaufmann, and lived her entire life in this community. Hfrr hushand, Rudolph Ramsel, died Marth 3, 1932. She is survived by two sisters, Mrs. "W. F. Nolte of Mynard and Mrs. Ed Vallery of Council Bluffs, Iowa, and one brother, John Kauf mann of Plattsmouth. Funeral services will be held at the Sattler Funeral Home Satur day afternoon at 2 o'clock with Rev. E. J. Moritz of the St. Paul's Evangelical and Reformed church, officiating. Visiting hours will he from three to six Friday afternoon. Aerosol Bomb Mineral Oil Quart t jNujol Oil Kills all pests by gas, quick and 75c Size easy and most effective. $49 Each J See Demonstrations Absorbine, Jr. $1.25 Size Pepsodent Antiseptic 75c Size 59c 89c 59c Max Factor Pancake $4 50 1 Zerbest Capsules fk Make Up i ) 25c Size 1 59e 49 49e Lustre Creme Shampoo Gabilla Perfume Sinful Soul $4 00 Bayer Aspirin 25 100 Incense Liquid Assorted Odors Cotton Blossom Lotion $1.00 Size - COC Olive Oil, pure 5 V U oz. Size WALGREEN AGENCY OS G 53333 ALL TYPES OF INSURANCE Cat! or See ERWIN SIEMERS ( PLATTSMOUTH PHSNE 5 j Stock Farm Improved 80 acres near ele vator and half mile from gravel at $75 per acre. A g'ood dairy and hog- farm. See SEARL S. DAVIS Phone 9 OPA Increase Price on Furniture WASHINGTON, Nov. 20 AJ.R) j Alarmed at the "almost complete j disappearance" of low and med-: ium-priced furnitui-e from the. market, the OPA announced Thursday that it plans to increase ' manufacturers' ceiling- prices as much as 20 per cent to encourape production. Details of the proposed increa ses were disclosed by OPA repre-i sentatives to menimbers of the southern furniture manufacturers' association meeting- today in Winston Salem. N. C. and also ; made available here. You'll be delighted with the fit of this carefully tailored slip and pantie ensemble. It's so easy to make too why not run up sever al sets for your pretty wool frocks? It makes a most accept able gift item. Pattern No. 8772 comes in 12, 14, 16, 18, 20; 40 and 42. Size 14, slip and pantie, requires .1? yards of 35 or 39-inch material. For this pattern end 15 cents in coin, plus 1 cent post g't your name, address and the PATTERN NUMBER to The Plattsmouth Daily Journal, TODAY'S PATTERN, 530 S. WELLS ST., CHICAGO &, ILL. INSURANCE REAL ESTATE and LOANS Loris B. Long Thone 230, 337W Donat Dldg. Journal Want Ads For Results PLATTSMOUTH LAUNDRY Wet Wash Rough Dry Flat Work - Finished Work FREE PICKUP and DELIVERY SERVICE Phone 30 C0LVIN-HEYN STUDIO FINE PORTRAITS Plattsmouth Hotel Fridays and Saturday Honrs 1:15 to 8:30 P. M. Q V0S79 I ShSi Every Littl Girts Wish for Christmas U IF US IE E ! 3 ' Tt mickey and Donald Sv n Comic Hook ilv -arineteen-IiicK mv li Com In Today for Yowr Copy O I .- 'V V -V,. W Dolly Rides in Style IV. Hsr Ts more nd her locr lashaa are rfftitlv "c!imnnr J i 1 f girL" Bii wears a beautiful flock dot du ul matc&lnx Jb a I bcniiot, cut undies, socks ai booes. Composition bead. jT K W arnit and Itgt. y jii OtharIaautifulDc.il. , 98c to 9.95 R N.tt. five-lncU tandJe. 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