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The Rhinelander Daily News from Rhinelander, Wisconsin • Page 12

Location:
Rhinelander, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE THE RHlNKtANDEtt (WIS.) DAILY NEWS 2, 1955 Frustrated Love Turned Chou Red, Sister-in-law Says TAIPEI, Formosa (NEAl A frustrated love affair when he he was a university student turned Chou En-lai to communism. That soap-opera twist in the life of Red China's leader was revealed by his sister-in-law, a tiny, 44-year-old whose own life has been scarred by Chou's disappointment in love. She prefers to be known by her maiden name, Ma Sheun-yi. But Mmc. Ma docs not conceal thai fact that her dutifully had her father imprisoned and killed 10 years ago and then put her in jail as Chou En-lai's brother and private secretary.

Her sons. 24 and 27, are somewhere on the mainland. Having met Chou En-lai recently at Bandung, and watched him in action. I looked up Mmc Ma in Formosa to see if she could tell me more about the man who appeared so urbane and pleasant at the Asian-Afro convercnce. Through an interpreter, told me what she had heard about his prc-Coinmunisl life from his foster mother.

Chou was adopted as the eldest son of a wealthy- family in Chc- kiang Province, she While in college, he fell in love and asked an aunt to arrange the marriage, but before this could be accomplished the girl was married to someone else. Frustrated with the old system that denied him his chosen bride, he embraced communism. Chou was married in the 1920's in Canton, and has no children. Mine. Ma didn't meet him until 1931, shortly after her marriage to his brother, when' the future boss of Red China lived with them for three months.

She didn't know he was a Communist until several years later when she read in the newspapers that both he and her husband were Reds. In those days, Mme. Ma recalled, he was a "perfect gentleman" and settled inter-family squabbles in a "very eloquent and persuasive" manner. That was before her family was by the Reds and their vast properties confiscated. "He evidently led a double life," she observed.

Today Mme. Ma would rather not talk about her father's death and her own imprisonment. She lives in Taipei with her 18-year- old daughter and works tirelessly for the Nationalist cause both at the headquarters of Mme. Chiang Kai-shek's Anti-Aggression League and as a proparanda broadcaster. When she turns her eyes toward the mainland, she has two wishes.

One is that she can change her her the hated "Chou." And the other? "I would be happy to know thai my sons are prisoners of the not Communists themselves," said Chou En-lai's sister-in-law. ET CLUB MEN BY UNCLE FRANK KOHLER (Chief Skillelccr) Karl H. Frederick, Trenton Times Chapter, sent us in John Raleigh's Fried Eggs deal. Mr. Raleigh is the renowned radio and news analyst.

Me got the idea so the story goes, while being held by the Gestapo in a German pokey. He must have been this is a fine dish. Melt pound of fresh butter in a skillet over a very low heat. Just as the butter starts to sizzle, break the eggs into the skillet. Be sure the yolk is in dead center.

"This," says Mr, Frederick, "requires the best of eggs!" Salt well, and dust liberally with paprika. Place a small pat of but- alop Ihc yolk, and Ihen slowly drip Vfe teaspoon of Worcestershire over the butter as the egg cooks. Have ready two slices of fresh white bread for each egg. Raise heal to medium for about 5 or 8 seconds, then turn off. Lift egg from skillet wilh a spalula, and while holding il alofl, pour the pan residue over the bread slices, then deposit the egg "sunny- side down" on one slice, cover wilh the olher, and eat the sandwich with knife and fork.

But good! Frank Crafft of San Francisco joined the Vancouver IB. Province Chapter with this different dessert "extremely easy" to prepare." Dip individual macaroons in sherry wine and cover bottom of saucepan with them. Dip marshmallows in sherry and add a layer of a layer of macaroons and a layer of marshmallows again, all dipped in sherry. The lop layer should be one of marshmallows. Pour on additional sherry if desired.

Place saucepan in a warm oven says no heal is needed if you have cooked Ihe dinner in Ihe oven prior lo this final step. Just before serving, and when mixture is warmed through, beat Ihoroughly, and serve warm with whipped cream, a dash of nutmeg, and perhaps a maraschino cherry. There are those among our membership who enjoy candy making, and for them, Mrs. R. A.

Gushing of New Orleans sent her recipe for fudge. 3 cups sugar; 8 heaping teaspoons cocoa; 1 teaspoon vanilla; 1 pinch salt; 1 cup milk Op diluted lamival FOOD Swift's Select Beef RIB 57 Fresh SIDE PORK 37 BAR-B-Q RIBS Swift's All Beef Luncheon Meat i.oo Pork Deckies 12-Oz. Tins I Saucr Kraut While They Lastlb. 10 rpCCU Calif Celery stlk. 15c rltCjli Calif.

New Potatoes ..10 Ibs. 49c Califi strawbcrrics i )l IfvllUVb Old Potatoes ISlbs. 4'Jc See Today's Valley Queen Ad For More Values! CARLSON'S 622 Mason St. Phone 1616 Store Hours: Sal. 8 to (i Thurs.

Fri. 8 to 9 PELIVBItV SEKVJCE Phone 161G cream; butler size of a walnut; 1 cup nut meals. Blend sugar and cocoa and salt Ihoroughly. Add cream or milk and stir well. Boil gcnlly unlil mixture forms a firm, sofl ball in cold walcr.

Add buller, and gradually Ihc marshmallow cream, and beat until mixture thickens, then acid vanilla, and lastly, the nut meats. Pour into greased pan and cul in squares when cool. We mighl add that we like black walnut meats in this one. Lowes E. DeWecse, of Dayton, Ohio, sent us a fine quickie for a party.

Learned this, he says, at Ihe Mayfair Holel in St. Louis. They call it "Brochettc Suisse." Jusl cut small cubes of cooked ham and Swiss cheese, making them ap. proximately of Ihe same size. Arrange them alternately on round toolhpicks.

Dip Ihem in well-bealcn egg then in bread again in egg and again in crumbs, anc deep fry Ihem, and serve piping hot to your guests. Send your favorite recipe and a stamped, self-addressed envelope lo Ihis newspaper and become a life member of The Skillet Club. We'll send you a membership card to prove it. (Copyright 1955, General Features Corp.) Thomas Fraser To Be Ordained On Salurday, June 4, His Eminence, Edward Cardinal Mooney of Delroit, will ordain 29 young men to the priesthood. Among these will be Fr.

Thomas Fraser, son of Mrs. Jack Kennedy, the former Doris M. Pecore of Rhinelander. Mrs. Kennedy is the daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Fred Pecore Sr. of Rhinelander, who will attend the ordination. Others who will attend are Mr. and Mrs.

Sylvester Gadu and family, Mr. and Mrs. Stcwarl Neuville, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Pecore and Mr.

and Mrs. Raymond Pecore. Fr. Fraser was born Dec. 12, 1929.

He allended Sacred Heart Seminary in Detroit, then completed his final four years at St. John's Provincial Seminary in Plymouth. He will offer his first solemn mass at 10 a.m. June 5. Red China came here (Ban- dung conference) as the master of Asia.

She has now been exposed as just another Asian- African Adam Clay ton Powell, Jr. (D-NY). Head Painlery Is Designed for Graying Walls NEW YORK (NEA) Silver threads among the black? If you arc a man, live in or around New York and are reasonably well heeled, something can be done about thai. Luxuriously. There's a new establishment just off Fifth Avenue (where else?) called the Gourielli Color Reviving Center.

Those words, "color reviving," are just a Fifth Avenue way of saying, "Getcha hair dyed here!" This new nine-booth' head paint- cry is the latest addition to Gou- riclli's for-men-only establishment. In other spots a man with a pocket full of silver and a head full of dandruff can 'have both treated. There's a barber shop, specializing in making bald-headed men look hairy by "contour cuts." They also do plain, old-fashioned haircutting, too. And there's a shop where a man can buy very nice sports shirts and tics. Upstairs is the boutique, a storc-within-a-slore where a recently-clipped gentleman may purchase delicate little gifts for his lady.

The entire operation is the brainchild of Artchil Gourielli, whose wife is Helena Rubinstein. He figured that what was successful with women would be successful with men, loo. The poor males, he thought, were being neglected. And so gradually he's put together this complete men's shop, which does Cor the men what his wife does for the women. The pride-and joy of the place is the latest service, which is, they say, the first such spot in the US.

Nowhere else, not even in Harrisburg, is there a color reviving center. Dyeing hair is an art. And, since this is a first, the artists here have all come from dyeing women's hair. There is, one of the experts said, no difference between dyeing a woman's head and a man's except that you use less dye for a man, which is a fairly profound thought. Suppose you are fiftyish, and pretty gray.

You figure that if you had your old brown hair color back, you could still pass for 49. Perhaps there's a job at stake, or a chorus girl. So you go into Gourielli's and you say, "Brother, can you spare a dye?" The first step, according to New York State law, is a patch test. That's to make sure you're not allergic to the dye. If you pass the test O.K., you're given an appointment with one of, the artists.

If you want, you can become a blond, or a red4iead. But the experts advise going back to your original color. So you sit in a tastefully-furnished booth, while the artist tints in a Gourielli-produced dye. It may take an hour or so, cost around $7.50 and last four to six weeks, depending on how quick you are at growing new hair. During those four to six weeks, you lead a perfectly normal life.

Go swimming, shampoo yourself, rest your weary head on a snow- white pillow. You'll still be dyed and beautiful. This is, the artists maintain, as permanent a dye as science and art can devise. If you think your friends and-or chorus girls will be shocked at seeing you gray one day and brown the next, there is a neat psychological dodge which one of the experts suggests to his customers. "We'll do it gradually," he says.

"Over a period of a few weeks, we'll turn it from gray to brown in easy stages. Meanwhile, you can tell people you're eating wheat germ." Gourielli likes it for the wives (if there are wives) to come in at the first consultation. That's because they feel the wives are usually the ones who want the change in the first place. "Men go along in a rut," the man said. "They'd never change." Because of the present-day do- it-yourself hysteria, Gourielli expects soon to wrap up its product, complete with instructions, in a home kit.

May even call it dye-it- yourself. Until that happy day, you have to show up in person. And bring your old gray head with you. They'll make a new man out of you. Shower Held for Lois Bennett CASSIAN (By News bridal shower for Miss Lois Bennett, who will marry Warren Latzig June 18, was held in Merrill recently by Mrs.

Joyce Peterson and Mrs. Belly Latzig. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bennett, Lois' parents, attended the event.

The Bennetls wenl lo Merrill again today for the Miss Bennett's graduation from Lincoln County Normal. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Micklcn and Mr. and Mrs.

Ed Bliss, all of Wausau, spent the weekend at their cottages on Sand and Mrs. Louis Helbock and son, Leon, Chicago, spent the weekend at their summer home in Harshaw. Stock, Wabasso, is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Stock.

Mr. and Mrs. Orland Simons and son, David, Milwaukee, visited at Ihe Roland Simons home last weekend. Mr. and Mrs.

Gene Simons of Chicago also spent the weekend and Mrs. David Johnson, Muckwanago, recently visited Mrs. Johnson's father, Gullick visited his son and his family in Waterford last weekend. Mr. and Mrs.

Ray Hcrness and children, Lee and Annette, Wooddale, 111., spent the weekend at Iheir collage on Sand visitors at the homes of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Laux and Mr. and Mrs. Milton Laux were Mr.

and Mrs. William Voight and children, Barbara and Billy, of Batavia, and Mr. and Mrs. Kohler of Minnesota. Mr.

and Mrs. Leo Cure and children of Blue Island, 111., are vacationing in Leipski, Waukesha, and Lee Mayr, Milwaukee, spent the weekend at the Leipski home in Harshaw. Mr. and Mrs. Chris Busche and children of Dululh, were weekend visitors at the Fred Busche and Roland Simon Harvey Quackenbush and sons, Barry and Ronny, are visiting at the Lawrence Retherford home.

By 1975 the one-car family could be in the a large proportion of families may be using three or more L. Colbert, president, The Chrysler Corp. June ate Month Time for you to enjoy the special values on all the good foods that come from milk All through June, you'll see this gay, happy, red and yeuow balloon pointing to special values on all the grand dairy foods that mean better living for you. June is Dairy best buys are dairy for you to enjoy milk and all the good things that come from milk. Wall Dlinty Wglch Disneyland lo you by American Dairy Association.

Dairy the biggest dairy food promotion ever. Let's put it over! Now is the time to join your neigh- food store operators, the dairy bors in supporting June Dairy dustry and government leaders. Month of 1955. This year's nation- Support your American Dairy Asso- wide "Festival of Better Living" ciation. Help put over all dairy has won the enthusiastic support of food promotions.

The dairy farmeri' own American Dairy Association of Wisconsin il idling mart dairy foodt la more Americani University Madleon 5, You outgrow your for Milk YOU SAVE EVERY DAY cuf your poQd ji ls Qt OI A wf you do your ott rmm Monday, Saturday, weekly or daily A PERFECT DESSERT, ADD ICE CREAM Cantaloupe Warm weather favorite Is here Rrt gome for breakfast, tool Ripe Watermelon White Potatoes MEAT VALUES! Ground Beef Beef Plate Sirloin Steak 29c 99c 10 7 5c 39c I5c 79c Lb ib Ocean Perch Fillets Mi. 33c Beef Slew 59c All Meat Skinless 43C Fish Slicks 3 Spareribs 45c Rock Lobster JffSiJZZ 89 Sliced Beef Liver 49c Breaded Shrimp Wieners JUNE IS DAIRY MONTH Your thrifty is limiting a special effort to bring you exceptional dairy value to lielp eelebrale national dairy month. Look to for the values! Natural Wisconsin Blue Cheese IVrfrct with a KIIlad favorite drcs- 59 Grade A Large Doz. Fresh Sunnybrook Eggs Sunnyfield Grade AA Butter Holly Garter Ice Gream deary's Fresh Milk 2 Assorted Ctn. Half 98c Cream Rich Cottage Cheese Ideal for salmis.

Serve with fruits or enjoy plain. For Quick Dinner, Fancy Solid Pack Tuna Light Meat 7-Ox. Can 21 27c Campbell's Soup A Orange Juice Lemonade Uoll 4B-Oz. Can Sunkist Brand Frozen 12-Oz. Can Waxtex Wax Paper Burry Cookies Sj 35c Marshmallow Fluff 25c For Cakes, for Candy, For Ice Cream Jar Star-Kist Tuna Hawaiian Punch Chunk Style Easy to Serve 6Va-Ox.

Can 35c Delicious Fruit Drink 46-Oz. Can 35c Saltine Crackers Vel Detergent Flavor-Kist Lb. Special 4 in 1 Pkg. Pkg. 25 For Laundry or Dishes fc31c Gerber's Baby Food Fab Detergent All Strained Varieties 60c For All Household Cleaning Needs Sawyer Crackers Town House Variety Lb.

Ajax Cleanser 2 25c Gf Ji jf Cans Cans Wesson Oil Liquid Shortening For Automatic Washers Detergent 75 50-Qz. Pkg, A AllrtLaundry Eight O'Clock Coffee Controlled Suds l(Hb, For Automatic Washers Pkg. jfo Mild and Mellow Lb. Custom Ground, lag An Exclusive SHORTENING 67c QKfAT fAClf 1C 4U prices effective through June 4th.

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About The Rhinelander Daily News Archive

Pages Available:
81,467
Years Available:
1925-1960