Muncie Post-Democrat, Muncie, Delaware County, 7 February 1947 — Page 3
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POST-DEMOCRAT, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1947.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SERVICES “LoVfe” was the subject of the LesKortifierntoii in- all Churches oi Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, February 2. # The Golden Text was: “Beloved f let us love one another: for love is of God; ... He that loveth not knoweth not God; for God is love’ 1 (I John 4:7, 8). Among 1 the citations which comprised the Lesson-Sermon was the following from the Bible: “If ye keep my commandments, ye shall abide in my love; even as I have kept my Father's commandments., and‘abide in his love. These things have I spoken unto you, that my joy might remain in you, and that your joy might be full. This is my commandment, That ye love one another, as I have loved you” (John 15:10-12);. The Lesson-Sermon also included the following passages from the Christian Science textbook, “Science and- Health with Key to the Scriptures” by Mary Baker Eddy: “Who hath found finite life or love sufficient to meet the demands of human want and woe,—to still the desires, to satisfy the aspirations” ,(p. 257). “For true happiness, man must harmonize with his Principle, divine Love;- the Son must be in accord 5 with the Father, in. conformity with Christ” (p, 337).
NEWSPAPER (Continued From Page One)
never reads or hears anything to counterbaalnce it they will finally come to believe it, however false it might me. That is why the news monopolists want to silence and put the independent papers out of business. Then they can take over and mold public opinion to their own liking, and will be able to lead the people around by the nose and make slaves of them. That is how Hit-
ler and Mussolini did it.
Legal Notice
NOTICE OF FIN At SETTLEMENT OF ESTATE
No. 8093 Notice ife hereby given, that the Adninistrator of the estate of Mabel Edna fames deceased, has filed his account or final settlement of said estate. All oersons Interested in said Estate ire hereby notified to appear in the Delaware Circuit Court -held at Mun■ie, Tndianat on Wednesday the 19th lay of February 1947 being the 39th lay of the regular January Term of aid Court, and show cause why said iccouht should -not be approved. The heirs of said decendent, and all ithers interested, are also required to ippear in said Court, on said day, ind> make proof of their heirship, or :laim to any oart of said Estate. Corbett MfcCIellan, Administrator dcCleilan & McClellan, Attys. Vttest: Jesse E. Greene, Clerk. 0 , Since paper book matohes were ntroduced in 1895, the “giveiway” rate has stepped up to a joint where an average of about 1,000,000 books are handed out svery hour in the United States jy cigar counter clerks and oth-
1946 Labor Record Really Not So Bad Those who confine their reading to the reactionary anti-labor press have concluded that the year 1946 was the country’s worst year from strikes and labor troubles and that labor was'obstreperous and unwilling to bargain in good faith with employers. The facts of the matter are that labor was more willing to bargain than was employers. In no case did labor refuse to abifcfe by the decision of a fact-finding committee. That cannot be saio of employers. An official report released by the Labor Department, but generally ignored by the press, shows that 1946 was far from being the nation’s worst year for strikes and labor troubles. In 1919, the first full year after World War I, 20.8 percent of the nation’s workers were involved in strikes and work stoppages. In 1946, the first full year following World War II, only 15 per cent of the workers were engaged in strikes or work stoppages. The report shows that the real causes of strikes were not due to any union abuses, but to economic insecurity and the rising cost of
living.
Another fact which the press has more or less ignored is that more than 90 per cent of all labor disputes were settled without Standing Republican colleagues.
DEMOS (Continued From Page One) taxes to everyone earning up to $302,000 a year. However, he said, proposals to reduce taxes by other methods *lso would be considered. Rep. Aime Forand, D., R. I. charged that the Republicans were adopting “steamroller tactics” in voting closed hearings and limiting witnesses to representatives of the Treasury De-» partment, the Bureau of Internal Revnue and congressional tax ex-
perts.
DEWEY AND TAFT
(Continued From Page One)
men in Washington. Taft was accused of going counter to the 1946 Congressional Reorganization Act in roder to satisfy Senator Brewster’s ambition to become head of a special committee. This broke the party unity
It is generally believed that both Dewey’s and Taft’s popularity in the Republican party has fallen by several points. If this keeps up the Republicans will have to begin to look around for a Presidential candidate for 1948.
POLICY FOR PALESTINE London—The British government today adopted a new tentative policy for Palestine, reported to be a compromise relaying the rules on Jewish immigration and shelving any idea of partitioning the Holy Land now or in the near future
Go lo Church Sunday
of the official report, labor is far rom being the wild and unruly lion which the reactionary press
has represented it to be.
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11 KILLED IN CRASH. Madrid—A four-engined Cuban aiHiner en route from Havana to Madrid crashed into a Spanish mountain range last night, killing all 11 persons aboard including five American crew memmembers, it was disclosed today by civil aviation officials. The Skymaster “Ruta De Colon” plunged into a peak in Avila Province, midway between Lisbon and Madrid. A dispatch from the governor of the province.said the disaster occurred about 5 p. m., in the Gredos Mountains.
$o, - /never said w&shd&q W3S fan, but it& certainty a thousand times easier with mg ALL ELECTRIC LAUHDK?
Starting with oceans of Electric Hot Water that cuts all the grease and makes Clothes Spotless
I run along while the washer does the job
And finally I sit and watch them roll through the ironer— really not too badl
Then they go into the Electric Dryer and are ready to iron in a jiffy
Ask Your Electrical Dealer to ftScw you the newest model Laundry Work Savers
INDIANA GENEBAl SERVICE DIVISION of the INDIANA & MICHIGAN ELECTRIC COMPANY
Broken Heart Cookie Adds an Extra Touch on Valentine Day TF you’re planning a Valentine Party this year here is a delightful way to please your guests and perform a bit of kitchen rrrhgic that will be truly appreciated. This great big Broken Heart Cookie gives you something extra to add to your party fare. If there are children to remember, someone you overlooked at Christmastime or just a neighbor across the way this cookie will de- jll, / T/ U light them greatly. Pt’s something (tjhOUOIfl aiOfinT special in the way of a cookie rcc- w-**^*~ ipe because, it can be broken and shared with all your friends and
guests.
And when you wrap this heart or set it out at your party, don’t forget the frilly paper doily for a base and plenty of wide red ribbon to lend a gay note. Broken Heart Cookie (Peanut Shortbread) 1 cup enriched flour Vz teaspoon baking powder Vz teaspoon salt Vz cup peanut butter Vz cup margarine Vz cup sifted brown sugar Vz cup granulated sugar 1 egg or 3 egg yolks , Roasted or salted peanuts Sift, measure flour and resift three times with salt and baking powder. Cream peanut butter and margarine with the sugar and egg until very light and fluffy. Add to flour mixture. Mix smooth. On greased, floured cookie sheet pat dough out into large heart. Decorate with roasted or salted peanuts. Bake in a slow to moderate oven (325° to 350° F.) until delicately brown, or about 20 minutes. Before baking prick through with fork to indicate portions into which the heart may be broken for
serving.
Preserve Industry Markets 15 Jellies There are at least 15 different kinds of-jelly on the market now, ranging all the way from jellies made from tree fruits such as apple, crabapple, quince and pineapple, t^jelites made from berries such as elderberry, loganberry, red and black currant, strawberry arfd raspberry. Among these jellies, quince has the most old-fashioned ring to it. It is reminiscent of gas lights, hooped skirts and handlebar moustaches. Nevertheless, preserve manufacturers have been making a clear quince jelly for oresent-day * consumption, and, judging from sales, people like its unique flavor and aroma. A quince, in case you’re just a oat doubtful, is a relative of the jpple. It grows on a tree that oelongs to the same family as the apple, but the taste of the two fruits bears no resemblance. You don’t want to try eating a raw quince, though, because it is quite astringent, and makes the mouth pucker up. Back in the old days jelly manufacture was mostly in the home kitchen. If you can picture it, all the jelly was made from crude loaf sugar which had to be crushed before it could be used. In fact, that was. one of the hardest parts of the job. Jellies were made only from fruits that grew nearby, and after the rush months of making them, manufacturers spent their less busy winter months selling their products. All this is in great contrast to today’s manufacture of preserves which is a most interesting combination of home-like care and scientific methods. Preserves and jellies are still made in relatively small batches in many plants, but the recipes have a precision about them that produces uniformly fine results every time. Vacuum sealing, strict standards of sanitation supervised by the Food and Drug Administration, spotless testing laboratories and the whole world of fruits to draw upon, has resulted in superior products that add a lot of color and flavor to meals.
The amount of dry-cleaning: fluid used in the U. S. has doubled during the last decade.
Facts File
WHfcN ELECTRIGTY PASSES7ftROWS/-/ SmCE IT BECOMES ELECTRON!CIM UGKTlN6 ; FUJ0ieESCENC£ IS ELECTRON 1C, WHI Lt INCANDESCENCE IS ELECmi CAL-’ELECTRICITY' FLOWS THROUGH SPACE.BETWEEN THE TWO ENDS OF THE FLUORESCENT TUBE —• IN THE COMMON INCANDESCENT BULB THE CURRENT IS CONFINED TO THE iMEXAL FI LAMENT
In FOOD PACkAGl NG PLANTS PHOTOELECTRIC DETECT) VES SPOT MINUTE RAWS !N CLASS JARS AND BOTTLESTHAT MIGHT prevent airtight sealing 5 .-
This gay Broken Heart Cookie adds extra delight to the festive pastries you’ve prepared for your Valentine Party. Treat your guests this year with a dash of something
different.
Pleated Skirt Styles Conform to Times Dry cleaning and pressing services not having returned to noiv malcy, the style of pleated skirts is being eyed with some concern by more thoughtful shoppers. But many fore and farsighted manufacturers- have given this liberated skirt style a practical, permanent
treatment.
Pleat edges have been stitched, sometimes concealed on the inside fold and frequently on the outside. Any woman with patience can, however, run a seam at the very tip on the inside of the pleJL
The average annual value of farm production in U. S. per worker has expanded from $360 in 1870 to $2,500 in 1945, due largety to the mechanization supplied by America’s manufacturers.
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Bachelors, Old Maids Like Turtles Chicago, II..— Bachelors and spinsters, a psychiatrist said today are like turtles. Every year they remain unmarried they with draw further into their shells, he said. George W. Crane, director of a psychiatrist clinic, said that spinsters and bachelors are the most eccentric and peculiar class of humanity. “They withdraw from life,” he said. A bachelor living peacefully in a penthouse apartment is more likely to suffer a mental breakdown than the most henpecked husband, Crane said. Even the husband who often is the subject of his wife’s wrath has a better chance to succeed in his business than any member of the Lonely Hearts Club, Crane claimed. “As the unmarried withdraw from society, they find it more to their liking to curl up on a couch and get their entertainment via the radio instead of going out socially,” he said. Crane said married persons weren’t any smarter or more intelligent than single ones, but they know how to use their intelligence better. “Married people are -better adjusted,” he explained. “They have social intelligence. At least they have, enough intelligence to rate a lifetime mate. “Husbands and wives are more socially adept and have a better understanding of human nature than the ‘turtles’, because marriage tends to extrovert a person’s interests.” “They know how^to get along with people and they have more horse sense.” Crane said he classed people into four groups—the turtles, the childless husband and wife, the husband and wife with children and grandparents. “The grandparents are at the top of the scale,” he said. “At 60 they are the most mellowed, most charming, most extraverted people in the world.” “They have kept their attention on reality and on the progress of the world, while the turtles have dried up in their shells.”
MIAMI FARM’S 2nd Bred Berkshire Sow Sale At the Farm, 1 Mile Southeast of Peru, Ind. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11th AT 1:00 P. M. We are selling forty very choice bred gilts, bred to Miami Quality, our Grand Champion boar at the Indiana and Ohio State Fairs. Miami Crusader, our undefeated fall boar at four 1946, State Fairs, and Crusader’s Leader 2nd our choice for the SenioV Yearling boar class in 1947, If you are in need of another good bred sow for Spring litters, don’t miss this opportunity. Write for Catalog, of Phone Peru, 2778W1 MIAMI FARM R. R. No. 1 Peru, Ind. Charles E. Ballard, Owner Clarence F. Bullock, Herdsman Auctioneers: Paul Good, Van Wert, Ohio; Wilbur Clair, Converse, Ind.
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Jean Mevritk
Heinz Home Institute
Fewer Women To Go Loveless In ’47
Spicing a black and white costume with paprika red and black beret plus matching shoulderstrap handbag CBS actress Vicki Vola economically carries out her threecolor costume scheme. Two skeins of each color of Dritz Luxury Worsted yarn were used for the pompom-trimmed duo.
Chicago, 111. — Fewer wo3aoi ut pajuxoadesip aq ni M uotu this year an9, as a result, more of them will go on the wagon, a psychiatrist said today. Dr. David Rotman, director of the Chicago Municipal Court’s Pschiatric Institute, predicted a ctfecline in the number of women drinkers. That’s because the return of the servicemen has made it “easier for a woman to hold a man,” he said. “Geographically and emotionally,” he said, “the war is finally over.” Rotman said thousands of young women from good average American homes, who swarmed into Chicago and other big cities looking for romance and. a highpaying war job, were going back home. During the war, he said, they found it easy to get a high-pay-* ing job but romance was “catch as catch can.” Soldiers and sailors shipped overseas, leaving the women heart-broken, he said. Most of ‘hem were teen-aged girls or in their early 20’s. These women “jumped by leaps and bounds,” he said. “Waitresses, office work3rs and factory workers went to saloons and taverns to drown their sorrows. They were making anough money so they didn’t have to depend on a man to buy them a drink. “They drank to forget, but it only made it worse. “Some got so drunk they kicked in doors and windows and caused distumances.” Arrested and brought into court, many were referred to Dr. Rotman’s office. Forty-nine per cent ef all alcoholic cases referred to :he court’s psychiatric institute last year were women. The year before it was 51 per cent. Ten Tears ago, he said, it was about 16 per cent. “Emotional instability brought about by ^disappointment - n j ove or a family situation was an important factor in each and every 2ase,” Rotmar* said. He said most often it was disappointment in love. But the “haphazard love situation” has ended, Rotman said, “fewer young women are coming to the city and those here are becoming adjusted or going back home.”
Blindness Is Cured By Shock Chicago, 111. — Richard Hebert, 22, who was blinded in a combat explosion in Germany, said today that another explosion Saturday night restored the sight of his left eye. Hebert, who regained the sight of his right eye through medical treatment, said he was firing the basement boiler in his father’s tavern when a gas accumulation caused a ball of fire to shoot from the boiler door. “The blast burned my left eyelid and arm,” he said. “When I got back upstairs I placed my hand over my right eye. I discovered I could see again with my left.” Physicians said Hebert’s blindness was caused by ^iock rather than physical wounds.
Baby’s Prune Pudding Makes Popular Desserts for Parents Good news to sugar-short hostesses are the flavor-rich desserts below. All of these have an old-time sweetness to them yet none will tax your precious sugar bowl. The secret of their fine, full-bodied flavor is a baby food—one of the ready-to-serve junior foods now being put up in glass or tin for toddlers who have sufficient teeth and taste to relish such smooth and savory desserts. Following a season of peak prime production, this pudding is now in good supply; so there is plenty for the nation’s moppets, with something left over for the family table, also. And a boon to desserts you’ll find prune pudding, too. Made of naturally sweet prunes and nutty farina, cooked to tenderness in eggenriched milk, this pudding has the taste character, the creamy texture that makes it a good mixer in pies, pudding, sauces and salads. Creamy Frozen Fruit Salad Soften to room temperature— 2 3-oz. packages cream cheese. Blend in— 1 6V2-oz. can prune pudding Vz teaspoon lemon juice Hi cup grape jelly Few grains salt. Beat with rotary beater. Pour into individual molds which have been rinsed in cold water. Store in freezing compartment for 3 hours or until frozen solidly. Unmold, Serve on crisp lettuce or water cress. Serves 2 to 3. Prunut Pudding Combine— 1 tablespoon brown sugar 1 tablespoon cornstarch Few, grains salt » Vs teaspoon cinnamon. Gradually add— 1 6V2-0Z. can prune pudding Vz cup milk. Boil for 2 minutes, stirring constantly. Add— 1 teaspoon lemon juice 14 cup chopped nuts. Pour into sherbet dishes. Chili. Serves 2. Apple-Prune Betty Combine— 1 6V2-OZ. can prune pudding 14 cup brown sugar 14 teaspoon cinnamon Vs teaspoon nutmeg Few grains salt 1 tablespoon lemon juice 2 tablespoons butter or margarine. Heat until bubbling, stirring frequently. Combine in shallow greased baking dish— 2 cups sliced cooking apples 1 cup soft bread cubes. Pour prune mixture over this. Bake, uncovered, in a moderate oven (350° F.) for 30 minutdl. Serves 4. Legal Notice NOTICE TO BIDOEUS Notice is hereby given that the City of Muncie, Indiana, by and through its Board of Public Works and Safety will at the office of the Board of Public Works and Safety of said City of Muncie, in the City Building of said -City on February 26. 1947, at 10:30 o’clock, a. m., receive bids for the purchase by and the sales and delivery to, said City of Muncie for its intended use the following item: 1 Standard one-half U-2i yard shovel with standard track, forty (401 foot boomi one-half (1-2) yard drag line bucket and necessary counter balance weights. Alternate three-quarters (S-* 1 ) yard shovel with standard track, forty (40i foot boom and one-half (1-2) yard drag line bucket. Bids forms, as required by law, upon which all bids must be made, may be obtained at the office of the Clerk of Board of Public Works and Safety in the City Building. The Board reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Each bid must be accompanied by noncollusion affidavit of the bidder. All such bids should be sealed, and must be deposited with said Bbard be fore the hour of ten o'clock in the forenoon on the 26th day of February, 1947, and each such bid must be accompanied by a certified check payable to said City, for the sum equal to two and one-half per cent (2 1-2', i of City - Civil Engineer’s estimate which shall be forfeited to said City as liquidated damages, if the bidder depositing the same shall fail duly and promptly to execute the required contract to sell to the City of Muncie, Indiana, the merchandise bid upon, as in said bid specified, and accepted by said City of Muncie, and to deliver such merchandise to said City, as in said bid and contract specified. WILLARD BROCK ■ Clerk of Board of Public Works and Safety of the City of Muncie, Indiana. (PD)—Feb. 7-14
BIG BUSINESS (Continued From Page One) and the consuming public to pay back to the stock holders the dividends that they lost in the depression. We all lost heavily during the depression. Millions of men were completely unemployed for two or three years and had only part time work at low wages for another year or two. Wonder what the big industrialists would say if the unions demanded that they pay the workingman enough to make up for what he lost during the depression. It seems to be all right for the rich man to try to make up what he lost in the depression, but it would be terribly wrong for the workingman to attempt to make up any of his losses. There is an old proverb which s'ays “What is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander,” but the idnustrialists just will not have it that way. They want all the sauce for their tender goose but the^ would force the workingman to eat his gander without any sauce at all.
Grandmother Seeks Long Lost Gold Mine Denver, Colo. — A 59-year-old grandmother, who hitchhiked here from Joplin, Mo., sought a grubstake today which would finance her search Jor a long lost gold mine. Mrs. Laura Branstetter Middaugh, arriving in Denver with only the “clothes on my back and 20 cents,” was confident that a tattered map handed down to her by a great-great-uncle would lead to lost Dutchman gold mine on Wyoming’s superstition mountain, perennial target of adventurous fortune hunters. She said her husband and three children thought her “an old fool.” But she insisted that the “map I have is the right map and I plan to find the mine or die trying.” o—^ Some gears used on trains are made of sheets of canvas welded together with glue under high pressure.
BIBLE QUESTiORS ! -ANSW-C R-€D BY TH-C VOICE/PROPHECY INTEftNATlONAt BIBUS BfeOAOCASTEfc Question—Does it make any real lifference, after all, whether thera 5 a resurrection of the dead or not? Answer—It makes a big differnice according to 1 Corinthians 15:16-18: “For if the dead rise not, hen is not Christ raised: and if Ihrist be not raised, your faith is rain; ye are yet in your sins. Then hey also which are fallen asleep in Jhrist are perished.” q.—isn’t it a denial of faith to ;ay in our prayers, “If. It be Thy viir? A.—It ivas no denial of faith when mr Lord Jesus Christ prayed in the Harden of Getlisemane: “O My Faber, if it be possible, let this cup )ass from Me: nevertheless not as [ will, but as Thou wilt.” Matthew 26:39. Q.—Is the word “soul” ever applied in the Bible to any creature )ther than man? A.—Yes. in R*evelatibn 16:3: ‘Ant^ every living soul died in the ma.” And Numbers 31:28: “And levy a tribute unto the Lord of the men of war which went out to bat•le: one soul of five hundred, both jf the persons, and of the beeves, and of the asses, and of the sheep:” —Q.—Does it make any difference what a fellow believes as long as he thinks he’s right? A.—A good text on this question is 2 Tllessalonians 2:13: “But we are bound to. give thanks alway to God for you, brethren beloved of the Lord, because God hath.from the beginning chosen you to salvation through sanctification' of the Spirit and belief of the truth.” Notice, “belief of the truth” has something to do with salvation. John 8:31, 32: “Then said Jesus to those Jews which believed on Him, If ye continue in My word, then are ye My disciples indeed; and ye shall know the truth; and the truth shall make you free.” It is important to* continue in Christ’s word. Then the truth (not error) makes the one who believes it free. Proverbs 14: 12: “There is a way which seemetb right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death.” A man may think that he is right, and be not only wfong, but in the “ways of death.” * - Ed. Note: Address your questions to the BIBLE QUESTION COLUMN, The Voice of Prophecy, Box 55,. Los Angeles 53, Califi Bible questions of general interest will be answered in this column as space permits.
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