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The Courier from Waterloo, Iowa • 8
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The Courier from Waterloo, Iowa • 8

Publication:
The Courieri
Location:
Waterloo, Iowa
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Page Eight TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1956. 1- WATERLOO DAILY COURIER, WATERLOO, IOWA. Johnson: Little Yoshiko Discovers America--the Natives Are Friendly, She Finds THE NEW BRIDE worried for almost a week before the party that perhaps the cake wouldn't come in time. And then, when it did along with 100 guests who brought her presents, she was overwhelmed. It was all so different from her own native land.

After all the guests were gone, she sat down surrounded by the gifts and said, "Oh, I must have a picture to send home." Even the next morning, she was still wandering around, touching the presents like a child on Christmas. She's Mrs. Paul Foss, who was Yoshiko. Kurusu of Japan before Paul received his discharge and returned there in June to marry her and bring her home. Says his mother, Mrs.

Clarence Foss, "She's such a pretty. little thing and she speaks English very well. She's so interested in everything that happens. But the postnuptial party we had was really something she just couldn't get over." Yoshiko "HOW'S BETTY?" Mrs. Howard Rouse, on the verge of her departure from of Sunnyside's justly famed Sunday night smorgasbords, stopped short and beamed.

"Fine." she said. "And she has another short story coming out in Western Review, the University of Iowa publication." Betty, the Rouses' daughter, is now Mrs. James R. Sunwall Hamilton, N. Her first published short story appeared last summer in the Suwanee Review.

Mrs. Kilpatrick Mrs. Bercowetz Mrs. Potts MRS. DALE KILPATRICK Long Grove, during the the American Meat Institute.

with Rath's, is pictured with Bloomfield, Mrs. H. meeting was in Chicago, but visit the antique-loaded town tries out the pump at quaint golden anniversary meeting of Mrs. whose husband's G. Potts of The Mrs.

Max from the women took a day off to 35 miles northwest. HOW'D you like nose out Miss Iowa for the title of queen? It's happened to Sally Anderson of LaCrosse, who has been named homecoming queen for Luther College this weekend. One of her attendants is Martha Barsness of Rothsay, who was Miss Iowa in the Miss America contest. Undoubtedly, while naming both Sally and Martha as campus beauties, the Luther students also like to pass around the honors a little and Martha'd be the first to admit she's had a few. MR.

AND MRS. Louis Kita of Minneapolis, are honeymooning, but it took a lot of coordination on the part of Iowa peace officers to get it done. Louis, an air line employe, and Phillis Marie Hurm, a secretary in a Minneapolis, high school, arrived at the New Hampton court house here at 7 p. m. for a marriage license.

Harold J. Eekes, Chickasaw County clerk of the District Court, lives nearby, so a license was issued to them. They then drove to Nashua to the Little Brown Church, but wanted to be married by a justice of the peace. They were refused the privilege, so they came back to New Hampton. They looked up C.

B. Phillips, justice of the peace, but had no witnesses. So Mr. Phillips called the telephone operator, who called Walter Cagley, night patrolman, who arrived at the Phillips home with his son, James. Then C.

B. Phillips married Louis and Phillis of Minneapolis, with Walter and James Cagley as the witnesses, just before midnight. Is Honoree at Bridal Courtesy Miss Barbara Krebs honored at a prenuptial courtesy Monday evening in the home of Mrs. Raynor C. Christensen, 3128 Alameda Cedar Falls.

Twenty-one of the honoree's co-workers from the Manufacturing Co, attended the event. Games were played and prizes awarded to Miss Marlene Wassan, Mrs. Arnold Schmidt, Mrs. Harley Chapman and Mrs. Leo Harring- ton.

A group gift was presented to Miss Krebs. Miss Krebs and Morris Kratz will be married Sunday at 3 p. m. in Zion American Lutheran Church. SAUTED ALMONDS.

Saute almonds in butter when you are using them in entrees and hot vegetables. Stir them often so they become an even golden brown. Blacks Studio Photo 8 10 Portrait in Color Reg. 5.95 ONLY 298 Frames from 2.98 No Appointment Necessary Photo Studio Black's Balcony This Recipe's a Winner, Too, for Dairy Queens good looks were only two of the qualifications in selecting an American Dairy Princess. The girls also have to know a bit about the culinary arts.

Although a winner, Shari Lewis of Dakin, has won the crown from Ruth Marie Peterson, who visited the National Dairy Cattle Congress in Waterloo last week, many of the girls contributed memorable recipes. As part of the International 1 Dairy Show in Chicago, contestants, all of whom live now or have lived dairy farms in the past, to know how to use dairy products as well as to talk about them and they had a chance to prove their knowledge while visiting the test kitchen of the American Dairy Association at the opening session of their contest. In the picture, Judith Ann Lewis, 20, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul F.

Lewis, of Fowler, shows her chicken casserole dish to Carolyn Card, 17, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray L. Card, of Webster City, and Joyce Hill Smith, 19, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Carl Smith, of Owenton, Ky. Judith's recipe for chicken casserole is as follows: CHICKEN HUNTINGTON 8-10 Servings 2 qt. casserole 2 cups chicken stock 2 cups diced, cooked chicken 2 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons flour cup milk cup light cream teaspoon salt preheated oven JUDITH 35-45 minutes 1 cup shredded sharp cheddar cheese 4 oz. noodles 1 tablespoon minced green pepper 1 tablespoon minced pimento cup cooked diced celery CAROLYN 1 cup sliced mushrooms cup toasted slivered almonds Make a paste of butter and flour in saucepan. Add milk and cream slowly, while cooking over low heat.

Stir constantly and cook until slightly thickened. Add salt and cheese and continue to cook until cheese melts. Cook noodles in chicken stock. In buttered baking dish mix noodles together with all remaining ingredients. Mix in hot cheese sauce.

Sprinkle almonds on top. Bake in oven until heated through and browned on top. Women in the News New Voters to Be Guests at 'Y' Series New voters will be special guests at the public affairs fall program of the Young Women's Christian Association. Three beginning next Monday evening, are planned. The Rev.

David Bluhm of the College Hill Interdenomiwill national speak on Church of Monday Cedar on itics and What It Means to You." On Oct 22 Dr. Irma Plaehn of the political science department of Iowa State Teachers College at Cedar Falls will speak on "Issues of This November Election." The third meeting, on Oct. 29, will be an informal session with local candidates of both parties speaking. Each meeting will begin at 7:30 p. m.

The purpose of the program is to assist in making better voters. The public affairs com(mittee members of the YWCA will act as hostesses. In charge of the program are Mrs. Robert Berger, chairman; Mrs. Clarence Groothoff, Mrs.

Berkeley Smith and Mrs. A. 1 P. DeLong. A food that's "scalloped" means that it is arranged in a casserole between layers of cream sauce: usually a topping of buttered crumbs or the crumbs and grated cheese goes over the top.

A LOVELIER YOU By Mary Sue Miller WATCHIN' ALL THE GIRLS GO BY. Look around, and you will see how poor cafriage spoils otherwise lovely looks. Never let it happen to you! As a preventative measure, keep these admonitions in minder let heels strike ground heavily Never slide or scuff feet along ground Never let feet stray apart in passing Never stiffen knees Never hunch or wing back shoulders Never let head drop forward Never swing arms more or less than length of step Never take steps of greater length than foot. But never! CLUES TO GOOD CARRIAGE. For a lovelier figure, walk with the grace that nature intended! To check or improve on your ability, send for "CLUES TO GOOD CARRIAGE," my leaflet giving complete instructions on shoes, stockings and walking techniques that enhance both carriage and legline.

Write to me in care of this newspaper, enclosing a LARGE, SELFADDRESSED, STAMPED ENVELOPE, and five cents in coin. Gallant Utah Woman Dies SALT LAKE CITY A gallant woman who walked a thousand miles to get here in 1860 and who conquered blindness at 91 died Monday at the age of 107. She was Mrs. Ann Catherine Milne, who would have been 108 Oct. 27.

On her four years ago she birthday, outlived everything and everybody I knew." Born Ann Catherine Jarvis in London Oct. 27, 1848, she came to America with her parents and six brothers and sisters in 1855. The family moved westward from Boston with the Mormon migration five years later, the children walking the entire distance from the railroad at Omaha to Salt Lake City. She lost her sight in 1924, but an operation restored it in 1939. Stricken with cancer in 1949, submitted to X-ray treatment and conquered the disease.

She voted in every election since women were granted suffrage, including the Sept, 11 Utah primary. Want extra flavor for pork chops? Try adding pineapple juice or canned chunks of the fruit to the skillet while pan-frying the chops, A whiz for a wonder for ease Erva Jettick "MARATHON" $1095 "MARATHON" is a dream of a shoe because it's light and flexible, fits with hugging sureness, and gives you perfect support from morning to night. It's especially crafted with a soft toe, flexible welt and light mid-height heel. Smart with both tailored and dressy fashions. 1 In black mellow unlined calf brown BROWN-WILHARM Fourth at Commercial SHOES 219 N.

Main WATERLOO CHARLES CITY Over-Eating Shortens Life, Conference Told (COURIER NEWS SERVICE) IOWA CITY -Lacks and deficiencies other than shortages of money may lead to nutritional deficiencies among older persons, members of the fifth annual Conference on Gerontology heard Monday at the State University of Iowa. Registrants for the first of the two conference days included Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Hougen of Decorah, Harry H. Ennis of Manchester and Lou B.

Einwalter of New Hampton. The lonely "last leaf upon the tree." for instance, may subsist upon quick snacks, including candy and other convenient carbohydrates, rather than preparing himself a balanced meal, observed Steven Horvath, acting director of the Institute of Gerontology at SUI. LONELINESS AND lack of stimulating social activities have even caused some senior citizens to invest vital money in television sets, which means more sitting and less digestioninvigorating activity, Dr. Horvath continued. And 'much TV, automobile.

and bridge sitting may lead to overweight, which may mean less milk, drinking, leading to calcium' deficiencies, pointed out Dr. I. V. Ponseti, SUI orthopedic surgeon. Speaking with slides illustrating skeletal weaknesses of many older patients, Dr.

Ponseti discussed the frequency of broken hips, among older persons. Brittleness of bone, he said, comes from a condition known as osteoporosis, or loss of calcium and protein from the bones. OSTEOPOROSIS, the surgeon added, is sometimes also the result of overuse of laxatives, which may drain the digestive system of essential minerals and other food elements, or the result of gall bladder removal and of menopause disturbances. "It's what we do when we are young that determines what we'll be when we are old." Dr. Horvath stressed.

He said that diet experimentation with rats suggests that human beings should, through proper eating, be able to stretch their life spans from three and ten to about five score years. In this connection, Pearl P. Swanson, assistant director of the Iowa Agricultural Experiment Station at Ames, noted that the lengthening of lifeexpectancy at birth from 47 years in 1900 to 69 years today is largely due to science's success with the diseases of the young. But there's been less success so far in prolonging the life of the middle-aged, she said. A 50-YEAR-OLD man today may expect to live about 23 years in America, only years longer than his counterpart a century ago.

Such figures, Dr. Swanson suggested, indicate that we are not putting into practice what we know about nutrition, because of the high correlation between overeating and mortality. "Statistics from life insurance companies, public health studies and nutrition groups show perhaps one-fifth of the adults in this country over 30 years of age are overweight," she said. However, she observed, caloric intake is but one part of Church Women in Waterloo Plan Special Guest Events Church women in Waterloo are planning special guest events. Miss Muriel Nielsen, misionary on furlough from the Santal Mission in India, will address members of the Ladies' Aid Society of St.

Ansgar's Lutheran Church and their guests on Wednesday. She will speak at a mission tea in the church at 2 p. m. Invitations have been sent women of Bethlehem Lutheran and St. Paul Lutheran Churches at Cedar Falls and Fredsville Lutheran, Church.

The program include devotions by the Rev. Richard Sorensen, host pastor; duets by Marilyn and Wenda Smith, accompanied by Mrs. Sorensen; and a welcome by Mrs. Chris Thomsen, Ladies' Aid president. Miss Nielsen, daughter of the Rev.

and Mrs. Eilert C. Nielsen of Clinton, returned to the United States in June after six years as principal of the Gaorang Girls' School. Mrs. Pete Attaway heads the arrangements committee.

A CHRISTMAS IN October "I trust St. Joseph Aspirin For Children" MRS.D. HOLLISTER, Los Angeles. It's trusted by more mothers, approved by more doctors, liked by more children than any other brand. Accurate dosage is assured.

ST. JOSEPH ASPIRIN FOR CHILDREN BUYS A. SPARKLING HOUSE! BIG NEW ONE -WIPE SPECIALLY TREATED DUST CLOTH REALLY PICKS UP DUST- -MAKES FURNITURE SPARKLEAND IT'S GUARANTEED TO OUTPERFORM ANY OTHER TREATED DUST CLOTH REGARDLESS OF PRICE! (One-Wipe) DUST LINTLESS CLOTH GUARANTEED to pick up and hold all dust--not scatter it into the air to resettle on furniture! So, furniture stays sparkling longer! GUARANTEED REWASHABLE! OneWipe is the only treated dust cloth really rewashable as often as 20 times without destroying treatment. Simply wash it gently, as you would nylons. Dirt washes out- treatment stays in! GUARANTEED SAFE FOR ANY SURGuaranteed by FACE: Use lintless One- Wipe everyGood Housekeeping where- even on mirrors and smooth NIO fabrics! It's greaseless and odorless, too.

DE COPROE PARENTED Wipe Dust 6 MOS. SERVICE only, 69 29 Millions now in Use Teachers, New Residents Are Supper Guests JOYCE (COURIER NEWS SERVICE: GRUNDY CENTER -Teachers in Grundy Center Community School and new residents of the community who have been attending the Methodist Church were entertained Sunday evening at a fellowship supper at the church. Approximately 300 persons were present. Entertainment included a program of musical numbers I presented by the Methodist Youth Fellowship with Miss Karen Brown serving as mistress of ceremonies. Miss Barbara Kreutz, home economics teacher, told of her experiences during the 10 weeks she spent in Europe this past summer.

MITCHELL Forty persons from Austin, Albert Lea, Charles City, Mason City, Manly, Osage, Little Cedar and Auburn, attended the Cooper family reunion Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Wilde. CLUTIER -Mrs. William G.

Novotny entertained over 100 women Sunday at ZCBJ Hall at a miscellaneous bridal shower honoring Miss Maxine Thomas, Des Moines. Miss Thomas will become the bride of Wayne Novotny Nov. One- Wipe is on sale at most department, grocery, hardware and variety stores including Briardale Stores Big Mkt. Strom's Food Centers Jas. Black Dry Goods F.

W. Woolworth the picture in weight control. With labor-saving equipment the broom, brush and replacing washboard and much of recreation passive rather than active, the energy cost per day per woman has probably some 400 to 500 calories since the turn of the century, she reported. "IRONICALLY enough, the equipment that makes it very easier to create a beautiful pastry has taken away the need for the calories provided that pastry. By buttoning their way through life, women find that they are overweight on diets furnishing only 1,650 calories per she said.

Ann E. Foldi, chief dietician for the Drexel Home for aged in Chicago, stressed the need for "meal artistry" as well as high nutritional standards. Eye and taste appeal at meal time is especially important, she observed, because "long term institutionalization creates a monotony which is hard to bear." "It is a custom in our home to review our menus each year, drawing up questionnaires listing all dishes used during the year. Then we omit dishes are not favored by our residents," Miss Foldi told the conferees. The group heard Dr.

Gerald P. Ivancie of the SUI college of dentistry on studies of changes in oral tissues associated with aging. the age of 70, some 80 per cent of women and 70 per cent of men have lost all natural teeth. But this is not inevitable and preventive measures at an earlier age would do much to change the picture," Dr. Ivancie said.

program will be presented for the public Tuesday at 7:30 p. m. by the Missionary Society of First Wesleyan Methodist Church. The purpose of the event is presentation of gifts for the workers at Brainerd Indian Training School near Hot Springs, S. D.

Members of the Sunday School classes will bring gifts which will be wrapped and mailed for Christmas. Included in the program will be a skit depicting the Sunday School at work. Mrs. The ONLY tuna packed by secret FLAVOR-LOK process CHUNK STYLE Star: Tuna You cunt beat the Bet LITTLE LIZ HUSBAND 10-10 People may not marry as early as they used to, but some of them marry a lot oftener. Rose Jansen, society president, is general chairman.

If You Have CREDIT CARD ANYWHERE Auto Rental Club Gasoline Hotel Restaurant Transportation You Can CHARGE With Us! CITY LAUNDERING CO CELWEIN OUT OF YOUR 18.254 HOME Waterloo Phone AD 3-2572 MITVALSKY'S FURS for flattery priced for savings! Mink, sheared racoon Persian lamb, broadtail, beaver Top quality pelts, latest styles Three-quarter and full lengths DYED BROWN HAIRSEAL $19500 DYED NO. MUSKRAT BACKS $22500 NATURAL MINK HEADS $23900 DYED SQUIRREL CLUTCH CAPES $16500 Plus Tex Furs Labeled to Show Country of Origin of Imported Furs 189 W. Fourth St. Dial AD 4-4125..

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Pages Available:
1,452,522
Years Available:
1859-2024