Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 46, Number 95, Decatur, Adams County, 21 April 1948 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Krening Except Sunday By HUD DECATDR DEMOCRAT CO. Incorporated Entered at the Decatur. Ind., Poet Office at Second Clast Matter I. H. Heller President A. R. Holthouse, Sec y A Bus. Mgr. Dick D. Heller .. Vice-President Subscription Rates By Mail in Adams and Adjoining Counties: One year, H. Six souths. >3 25; 3 months, >1.75. By Mail, beyond Adame and Adloinlng counties: One Year, >7; I months. >3.75; 3 months, |2.00. By carrier, 20 cents per week. Single copies. 4 cents. These ten and twenty thousand dollar fines are going to cut a hole in John L. Lewie’ 130.000 salary. When Judge Goldsborough speaks, the country listens and some have to pay. 0 o Colorado wheat this year is rat ed as "tops'’ and by a natural course of events a lot of it may arrive "bottoms up. " o o It is a sorrowful thing to realize that millions of people in this ■world have never eaten a chicken sandwich. You'll lose that hour of sleep Sunday morning, but it must be done If you wish to keep in time with daylight saving time, which starts at midnight Saturday ——O O - ■ The Jaycees will be formally ' chartered here this evening and the newly elected officers, headed 1 by William Coffee, installed. The 1 membership is composed of young ' men. who as time travels on. will embark In service and civic pro- • grams helpful for the city. We ! wish them a lot of success. o o < Economists and business leaders 1 forecast good business for a few ! years, with resultant heavy cm- 1 ployment. Thi country and the rest of the world needs machinery. 1 automobiles, steel, food and clothing and unless the cart is upset.. American prosperity should continue for a long time and in all' 1 walks of life o o Things are a little brighter ini Great Britain, if not much. Plea - sure driving, which has been abso-l; lutely forbidden since last October.l 1 is now allowed up to So miles a ' month, and gasoline will be award-' ed to that extent. Driving 90 miles i a month will at least enable Bri- 1 tons to go to the grocery store. If i there is anything at the store, that I is. to make it worth their while to i
The Body's Need for Protein
By Herman N. Bundeeen, M. D THE body is like an enidne in that it cannot operate without fuel.i Give it what it need* and it per-1 form* its complicated tank* with' atnazlnr perfection. Deprive it of! some needed element, and it will still so on for a time but with greatly diminished efficiency. Proteins are one of the substances most needed by the body. The body cannot supply proteins for itself. The food we eat must furnish them food such as meat, milk. eges. and whole grain cereals ■ and. if It does not. the effects are quickly noted In loss of energy and enduram*. Also, the abundant vitality of health Is soon replaced hv a feeling of general weakness and extreme fatigue ''limbing stairs, for instance, produces a feeling of weakness in the legs and tiredness out of all proportion to the effort The heart lieats slowly as a result of poor circulation People suffering from lack of protein often feel cold. In many cases, there Is also lessened resistance to Infections In view of these important facts, we should all learn something about proteins and how to satisfy the body’s need for them Alt proteins are made up of substances known as amino acids, some containing more, some less Modern research has discovered that there are at least IP different amino acids which the body must have for proper functioning, and all of these must be supplied by the protein foods we eat. Mot one of them can be manufactured by the body for Itself. Hence, doctors rate proteins nccording to how many of these es- i senlial amino acids they furnish. < These which <«*taic ail ten are called complete proteins; those • which do not are regarded as in- i ’ Proteins nt greatest value to the j nrnp -«■»• fra® su-b feeds ash meat, »•>*.. eflß fi»h feOt and i cheese Vegetable proteias, sec h <
taka the car. o o The mathematician experts who thought they had a formula by which they could run their winnings at roulette up Into the thousands. settled at the rate of about >lO an hour. That’s good pay. even lor the trades but probably not too much after the two college boys deduct the cost of living in Las Vegas, mileage and tax. It's difficult to beat the odds In favor of the house, according to Hoyle. G o The Old Guard forces on the Republican party, headed by .Hoover and Col. McCormick, seem to have control of arrangements for the Philadelphia presidential convention. Governor Green of Illinois, a pet of the Chicago Tribune, has been chosen to deliver the keynote speech and House Speaker Joe Martin, a conservative of the Taft wing, will be permanent chairman of the convention. In the event of a deadlock between Taft and Dewey, lightning may strike Green or Martin, for the play will lit to defeat Stassen, regardless of how many delegates he garners However, the liberal wing of the I arty reyresented by Stassen may let the die-hards run the fireworks, but take the nomination. o——o Justice Hughes: One man to whom life has been kind is former Chief Justice Charles E. Hughes, who has just celebrated his 86th birthday in Washington Twice governor of New York, associate justice of the Supreme Court. Republican presidential candidate, highly successful lawyer, secretary of state and finally chief justice. Mr. Hughes has had his fill of honors and has richly justified them. The one fly in his ointment was. <>t course, his failure to win the presidency over Woodrow Wilson in 1916. Except perhaps James G. Blaine in UM. Mr Hughes is the < lily man to go to bed on election night, thinking that he had won. and then find out later that it wasn't so. Many Americans have legretted that he was not his party's candidate four years later, when any Republican could have won. Whatever his regrets at missing the presidency. Mr. Hughes ,-an take comfort at the thought that the chief justiceship is a rarer honor. There have been 33 presi dents, but only 13 chief justices
aa those from beans, peas, and whole-grain cereals, belong to the < incomplete class. They are healthI ful but cannot be relied on alone 1 to supply all ten amino acids which the body must have. The moderately • active man needs about 70 grams of protein a day, while a woman requires about go grams During pregnancy, about *0 grains are necessary These amounts are supplied approximately by one average serving of moat, one egg. and three glassfuls of milk. Growing adolescents in their teens need between SO and 100 grams of protein dally How then is a person to get the required amount of protein? . It is a good Idea to start wi’h milk. The adult should take about a pint a day. aud children and adolescents about a quart. Then, in addition, there should be one serving of about three ounces of meat and one serving of a wholegrain cereal, beans, or peas. Severe protein deficiency does not develop very often except during crtaln diseases in which large amounts of protein may be lost from the hody. such aa in some kidney disorders. But unless we take care to eat enough of the right foods, a milder deficiency which will yet be enough to sap strength and destroy efficiency, may creep up on us unawares It la possible to determine, by chemical test, the amount of protein circulating in the body. When such protein deficiency is found to be present, it should be corrected immediait-lv not only by an increase in the protein in the diet, but By blood transfusion, if necessary. or the use of what arc fcpown as protein hydrolysates. The latter are mixtures of the annuo acids which make up the vartou? iitoteiH* There are also protein mixtures "m«ainh>« milk proteins h er W*ueh sr» quite useful in trerttaent of proteia deficiency
c.- GLOOM CHASER i utf BALIB 2 rati * z -» a
Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LEE 0 0 Q If a young man is engaged to be married should he resent it if rhe girl's father ask him questions pertaining to his financial affairs, business position, and health? A. No; the father has a perfect right to be concerned ahotrt everything that might affect the happiness of his daughter. Q Who should give the order to the waiter, when a woman is entertaining another woman at a .unch eon or dinner in a reataur-.nt? A. The hostess usually gives the order for both. Q Would It be air right for a child's mother to write the invitations to his party? A. Yes. unless the child is old enough to write the invitations himself. It would lie nice to have him write them if he can. —. o— - 0— ; ; (» Household Scrapbook By ROBERTA LEE 0 0 Recipe File Instead of having the oidinary scrapbook, "buy a quanity of small 3x5 cardo at any stationery store. Ea< h recipe or household suggestions can be pasted on a card and then filed alphabetically.
W/? MARGARET NICHOLS . f I comiGirr n MaxGaasr ooimam NtatoiA tarmavTiD n mui rntvaa miucan 7* (
CHAPTER NINETEEN THEY WAITED a little way without speaking. Then Kirk said, "I've been wanting to see you for two weeks . . Hui voice was restrained. Kit asked a hushed and foolish, ' Why?” He stopped and looked down at her. frowning. "Why? I thought at least that we were friends. We had a very good beginning, a perfect beginning . . ." She thought, I want to come close to you end put my arms arouncj you, Kirk. I never wanted to do that before. I want, to put my face close to yours and tell you how I feel. I don’t feel quiet now. It’s still wonderful but it isn’t quiet . . . Instead her voice trembled when she said. "Kirk. I’m a stranger among strange people. I’m very young and unsophisticated, I've been told. I'm not a guinea pig. I’m not an experiment. I have c. job I’d like to keep. And I don't want kindness out of pity because I'm alone I have to be cautious *’ Hui frown deepened. “I haven’t the least idea what you're talking about. Kit, or where you ever got such ideas. I've been thinking that there was something in your past, something that made the lights go out in Washington that made you go cold all at once . . ." "There is something in the past but I can't talk about it." "A man?" "Yes. My . "A beginning is all we had. isn't it?” He smiled but there was no mirth in it. “I tried. Kit. Remember. I tried. Shall we go back now ? Mike's probably looking for you." "You—you go back. I'd like to stay for a while longer . ;." She was shaking but not from cold when she saw him turn and walk toward the lighted house. What had she done? Why hadn't she explained herself? She thought. I can't think clearly. I can't even see you clearly, Kirk. Suppose I've misjudged you. Suppose Tracy was wrong Suppose she was just jealous. Suppose I'm net a guinea pig. a toy. an experiment But MM said that after tonight everybody would know w|k> Tracy's new man is. You . . .ltd. Kirk. IV. not a girt to be kissed in -iark corners while you dance a the tight with found her in tbs garden B> hoped that aha wo'-44 A .aJeiFT <Ba
DELATOR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Bending Exercise Most housewives try to avoid stooping. But if one can remember to pick up things from the floor without bending the knees, bending only from the waist, It will lie excellent exercise each time it is done. Pie Crus* The bottom crust of the pie will be nice and flaky If the pie is corded on a wire rack when taken from the oven, allowing it to cord on the bottom as well ae the top. o April 21 — The Jury frees Harry Sinclair, oil magnate, in the conspiracy case. ('apt. George Wilkens. American aviator and explorer, flies over the North pole. Daughter of the late Mrs. Gene Stratton-Porter gives a lot In Geneva tn the town for a band stand site. J. J Wood. Fort Wayne General Electric inventor, dies at Ashville, N (' The smallpox situation at Monroe' has improved, no new <ases reported Miss Etta Atwpaugh entertains the King's Daughters. ——o — The saddest thing that can befall a soul when it loses faith in God.
tice that he wai unsteady. He was sure that she did not know he was seeing two Kits, both of them I lovely. 1 "Having fun?” 1 "Not much, Mike.” "Neither am I even though I I just won an argument. The party’s I a great success. Have you no- i ticed? Tracy is queen of them all. < She dotes on putting on a show i like this. Why did Kirk come back < alone?" I "I wanted to stay out longer ” i Mike frowned. "Is he playing t two games, yours and Traey’s?” "He isn’t playing a game with ; me. Mike Not now ” "Shouldn’t have said that. That < was hitting below the belt. Sorry. Kit . . ." He took her hands and pulled her gently to him. "Kit, do ’ you know what you make me think of? The pictures you see in magazines of a pretty fresh looking girl standing before a low ram- . bling white house with green shut- ' ten. Sometimes there’s a dog with her and sometimes there’s a baby. I 1 Sometimes they're advertising house paint and sometimes grass ; seed. Anyway, that picture makes ' you long for a set-up like that . .. It’s clean and normal. Your imagination Ulis in the rest of the story. ■ The little white gate opens at six 1 or thereabouts and there’s a young 1 man coming home ... I’m getting sentimental or romantic. I’ve been drinking a lot. I always drink too much. Did you know that? It makes me kid myself along U I drink enough” I "Let's walk. Mike." • "Okay.” And as they walked along, he said, "I like you more : than any girl I’ve ever known, Kit. ’ You’ve got stardust tn your eyes, the kind of stars a man could • hitch a wagon to. I’m a big Muff, do you know that ? I sneer at the . idea of romantic love but I d give I my right arm to fall for a girl . like a two-ton track. It would be i the pause that would make me get , down to serious wo-.k. Do you i know what somebody told me a long time ago . . . 'You have books i in you. Mike. Good books ...” "Why don’t you write them?" But She was thinking. Why didn’t , i I explain myself to Kirk? Every- 1 > thing in wrong. "t am By God, I am. Tomorrow . . . ■ "But not if you dnnk " He stopped and looked down at nag. aaiteg. Stour* a darting , Let* go Mck add dance. Taught I tapi aa M aayttag can happen, ”
Lisi Honor Students At Catholic Schools 57 Students Listed In Six-Weeks Term Honor rolls for the second six weeks of the second semester at the Decatur Catholic high school and the St. Joseph grade school were announced today by school official*. There are 28 students on the high school honor roll, and 29 on the grade school list. The complete list follows High School A B Maxine Keller 5 1 Donna Lou Kortenber 4 1 Clarice Rumschlag 4 1 Henrietta Faurote 2 4 Agnes Geimer 1 5 Norma Appelman 1 4 John GilHg 5 Marcyle Geimer 5 1 Marlene Laurent 5 1 David Glllig 3 3 Dorothy t'leinan 3 3 Marv Alice Braun *> Betty Braun * • Marilyn Teeple 3 2 Georgia 1 4 Julianna Meyers 1 4 | Louis Rumschlag 1 5 i William Schulte 1 5 James Meyers 1 5 i Rarb-ira Deßolt 5 I Frances Miller 5 , Isabelle Kintz • 1 . Ann Gass 3 2 ; Phyllis Omlor 3 2 I Rosemary Glllig 2 3 Patricia Kable 1 4 1 Theresa Kohne 1 4 Margaret Mcßeth 1 4| Grade School Matthew Harris 8 1 Catherine Loshe 7 2 Thomas Rtunschlag 6 3 Robert Gase 5 4 Vera Geels 5 4 ■ Mary Peterson 1 > ] Mary Ann Ulman 3 6 , Margaret Ann Schmitt 10 ; Marjorie Heimann 9 1 i Phyllis Braun 9 1 1 Stephen Gass 7 3 I Barham Voglewede 7 3 ■ Jean Marie Kable 6 4 Joseph Costello 3 7 Rita Rumschlag 9 1 Michael Kohne 8 2 Vergie Sant bine 8 2 , Sharlene Murphy 6 4 i Matthew Schulte 6 4 . Barbara Kay Borman 7 3 Marcella Glllig 4 6 Leola Ann Ford 2 8 Judith Parrish 7 3 Michael Harris 6 4 Dolores Kintz 6 4 i Rita Heimann S 5 I Mary Voglewede 3 7
"That's how I feel, too* They went back to the house and danced, Mike’s long legs a little unsteady on the polished floor. Looking at the people looking for Kirk but not seeing him, Kit thought, Are you as mixed up as I? As Mike? I don't see Tracy either. They’re probably out in the garden together, she and Kirk Oh, why did I ever come to this placet Here’s Mike who needs someone to shake him out of himself. And there’s Tony and Anita. They're mixed up, too, mixed up and in love and afraid to be poor. "Wouldn’t you like to meet some of the people here?" Mike asked. "I know some of them. They're not bad." "I’d rather not." "Someday I’m going to have a house like this and give parties like thia." “Do you want to?" “You sound plaintive. No, I don’t. I want a house like the one in the advertisements for grass seed and paint I want a girl like you waiting for me. I want to breathe air and not soot. I want to see trees and not my neighbor's laundry . . . Hey. what goes on?" For suddenly the music went off key. Guests ceased dancing and rushed into the hall. A fight. Mike wondered ? A fight at Tracy Field’s party? That would be swell news. He would relish it. He'd like to see Tracy's fine party turn into a brawl! He could not see what was happening in the hall for the entrance was blocked with an excited crowd. The suspense was awful. Not to be tn on the kill waa not to be borne ... "Follow me," he ordered Kit abruptly. "What’s wrong, Mike? Can you see?" "No. But I’m going to. I don’t want to miss it. Here, give me your hand . . .■ They went out byway of the terrace doors. Then, circling the house, they entered again through the front entrance. The music had stopped and a hundred guests stared with f.-oten faces Kirk was carrying Tracy up the stairs. Kit could not see Tracy's face. But She saw a hmp arm. She and Mike stood very still But when she moved to follow Kirk. Mike moved quickly after her Tracy fainting’ He couldn t believe it Thea he reassberad how tired she'd laotog lately (To Be CeetfeeSd)
Nancy Mies * ’ David Voglewede « 8 0 — Norbert B. Knapke Named Sales Agent The appoinlmen! of Norbert 11. Knapke of Fort Wayne as sales agent in the local suroundlng area has lieen announced by Virgil E. Freeman, vice president In charge of agency developments, for North American Van Lines. Inc. North American Van Line*, one of the few national carriers of household goods, opened their national headquarters in Fort Wayne last year and are one of the fore most movers In the country., The firm has permits to operate into all 48 states and also holds an Indiana Intrautate permit enabling them to move between all points within the boundaries of Indiana — - Manager Visits In Decatur Frank Millie, state treasurer and s'ate manager of the Jenner for governor clubs, was a Decatur visitor Tutoday. Mr Millis visited with Mayor John Doan and Harry Essex. Republican county chairman, and left later in the afternoon for Huntington. Mr Millis stated that the Jenner for governor candidacy was meeting with great response in all parts of the state and that he felt Sen. Jenner would have little trouble in getting the GOP nomination in June. —o Trade In a Good Town — Decatur 'Cooks' Corner’ BV MARY R. SMITH Favorite Food and Oh-So-Delicious Coconut is another of the food* we missed during the war Now that It's back, there can he more coconut plea and cakes — or parhaps Coconut and Nut Bars. I came upon the recipe for these when a college friend received a box of them through the mail. They were wonderful! I immediately requested the recipe and here it is
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Coco and Nut Bara % cup butter or margarine. 1 cup sifted, all purpose flour Make above mlxtura Into crumbs as you would for a pie crust. Pat crumbs Into a buttered 9 inch pan and bake at 350 F. until they are delicate brown. 14 cups brown sugar 2 eggs V.cup coconut 1 cup chopped nuts J tablespoons flour % teaspoon baking powder H teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon vanilla Combine the above ingredients and pour over the crumbs in the pan* Bake again until a golden brown, approximately 20 minutes, at 350 F. You’ll like them, I'm sure. Coconut giva< this gingerbread a deluxe quality that will win many compliments when served. Tropical Gingerbread cup butter or margarine Vfc cup sugar 2 eggs 1 teaspoon soda cup molasses J teaspoon ginger 1 teaspoon cinnamon U teaspoon salt I>4 cups sifted, all purpose flour V.- cup cold water 2 cups fresh, grated coconut Cream butter and sugar well, add egg* and beat all together. Dissolve soda In molasses r.nd add to first mixture. Mix and sift remaining dry ingredients and add to first mixture alternately with the cold water Stir in 1 cup of the coco-
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