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The Daily Herald from Chicago, Illinois • Page 65

Publication:
The Daily Heraldi
Location:
Chicago, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
65
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

APR. 18, 1968 Suburban 7 Creative Classes Included In Randhurst Flower Show ANNUAL riMHITV dance April 20 will culminate the se.ison for Arlington Heights Newcomers Cluh held in Vernon Hills Country Club and wiD benefit the Mental Health Clinic in Arlington Heights. Working on decorations are Mrs. By Dittos, Mrs. Dennis Anderson and Mrs.

man Saunders. Nor- Newcomers Bring Spring To Country Club Lunch Seven classes, all designed to stimulate the imagination and inspire creative designs, have been planned for the table setting and floral arrangement show to be held at Randhurst May 9, 10 and 11 in conjunction with Mother's Day. Invited to participate in the show are church, civic, women's and youth groups of the community. Set-up for the classes is as follows: A. Patio breakfast for the June graduate.

B. Breezeway brunch using a bon voyage theme. C. Veranda luncheon with a bridal shower theme. D.

Lawn social with a tea theme. E. Pool-side supper with nautical theme. G. Mother's Day surprise table.

is open to youth groups only. RIBBON awards will be presented by accredited judges at noon May 9. In addition to the floral and table setting exhibits on the main mall, a program of demonstrations, professional techniques and tips will take place in the Town Hall concourse level, May 9 and 10 from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. This program will cover such subjects as "Gardening Tips and Care of Plants," a sewing session, a for Spring," "A Firm Hold on the Purse Strings," "Frosting Mas terpiece," "Round the Clock Figure Control," and "The Art of Cooking." Class registrations may be made by calling the Randhurst 259-0500.

Advance reservations are required as tables, which will be furnished by Randhurst, and space are limited. A complete schedule will be mailed to groups making reservations. i WHlhcr was forgotten amid brightly- cnliiH'cl I'uus and llcmiT-draprcl Imnnios which created a si'Miim i the Arlington Heights Newcomers Club K.isirr luncheon in Old Orchard t'ountry Club April 10. Follow inj; the luncheon, Mrs. Rolx-rt Potts, chairman of the nominal nm committee, presented the following slate of ol'tiivis 1 tor next li-' Meadows Bowl Awards will be presented after the luncheon.

Dinner plans for the close of the couple's bowling tournament month teim ol oltiee: Runnini; tor president are Mrs. Hud Dickinson and Mis. Rolx-rt Fletcher; vice presirlenti.il nominees a Mrs. Hubert Holmes ami Mrs Kenneth Meistcr. Mrs SU-phan Kldrulgc and Mrs Hutihi- are seeking tlie office of treasurer; Mrs.

Charles and Mrs. Al Simonson are candidates for recording secretary, while Mrs Rev men Brantmg and Mrs. James Glenn are nominees for lorresponding secretary KI.KCTION OP officers will be held at both the May luncheon and eu-ninj! meeting ami installation i held at the June luncheon Cards were plaed after the announcement of the slate of officers i won Mrs a Klac kbuurne. i Carlton A i and Mrs. Kicluird Wood for brH'Ke.

Mrs. Hmklo for a a i and Mrs Move! i i i anil Mrs Paul Kale for pinochle. A coffee to gleet new members i he held in the home of Mrs. (Ilenn i Mrs heynien a i co-hostess. Wednesday.

April '24 THK HOMI: ami Garden group i mee' Momlav. May H. at the Lauterbei and Oehlcr Funeral Home where Mrs Wayne Harmon, decorator for the Chandelier Shop in Arlington Heitfht.s i speak on "Ac- the Home." Mrs will be presented that night with bowling afterwards. TIIE LADIES' evening bridge group will have a potluck dinner at Pioneer Park Tuesday, May 28. The afternoon bridge group is planning a bridge luncheon June 6 at Old Orchard Country Club.

Anyone interested in joining the club may obtain further in- I formation from the membership are scheduled for May 25 at the i chairman, Mrs. Robert Potts, Rolling Meadows Bowl. Awards 392-3013. EASIER TO MAKE than you think, these pretty tea cakes use two kinds of cake mix, a simple frosting, and semi-sweet chocolate morsels, which are used to give part of t.ne frosting its rich, chocolate flavor and also to decorate the white-frosted cakes. In Two-Tone Dress Petits Fours Arrive On Spring Tea Scene Now you can make pleasant little Petits Fours at home- simply, quickly, and inexpensively, using cake mixes and shortcut semi-sweet chocolate Home Safety Habits Vital for Children morsels in a new way.

Start with two kinds of cake mix, chocolate and white. Both are baked in one large shallow stantly I pan, the white cake at one end i and the chocolate at the other. The entire cake is frosted in the pan. All the frosting is i made at once, then divided into half chocolate and half vanilla. Help keep your home accident free by teaching children home safety habits.

Not only are children subject to home accidents, but children's carelessness is a major hazard to other You and Your Problems Brain Tumor Causes Husband's Problems Harmon is a Newcomers Club member. The Newcomeis Club announces that the closing dinner and luncheon dates for the card nnd bowling tournaments have been set. The ladies bowling luncheon will be held May 2'J at Rolling by I)K. G. NEUMAN Dear Dr.

Neuman, After 15 years of a happy marriage, my husband began to ehange so that I hardly knew what to expect. He became short-tempered and would fly off into a rage for no reason at all. He was al- wajs a very responsible person, but now things seemed In i i mind. It began to affect his work, and that was when his company sent him to a doctor. He has a key position could be Secretaries Style Show lit May 4th The Ways and Means Committee of the Park Flames Chapter of National Association, International, has planned a luncheon and fashion to be held Saturday, May 4.

In Rolling dreen Country' Club, Arlington Heights. Cocktails will be available at 1 o'clock, followed by luncheon at 1:30. Summer ensembles from the Cynthia Shoppe and The Flair Hat Shop, Des Plaines, will be modeled by members of the chapter. Tons of Cheene American cheese production now totals 1,578,000,000 pounds a year. nit.

anil a slip there quite serious. My husband was as worried as the rest of us because he didn't understand himself or why he did these things. After a lot of tests, the doctor told us my husband has a brain tumor and needs an operation right away. This frightens us. We had thought that my a would need treatment emotional problems and was ready to take any treatment to get help, but a brain operation seems so extreme.

Can it really clear up my husband's problems or is he hopeless? Doesn't a a i operation damage a person's ability to think or do things? Mrs. D. In answer to another letter in this column, I discussed how emotional problems can cause physical symptoms. This letter describes the directly opposite situation, where is a physical cause for emotional difficulties. A brain tumor is just one of many i physical conditions that a create changes in personality and emotional problems.

Where we have symptoms that seem physical or others that seem emotional, careful diagnosis is most important before starting any treatment. I'm sure we've all a stories about people who were treated for emotional illness, only to learn later that a brain tumor was responsible. It's true that this could happen, because brain tumors were so difficult to discover. Very rarely, a X-ray might find one, but otherwise, more i i approaches were used. Psychological testing picked up of the clues, but here too a i tumor could go undetected.

A MAJOR advance in medicine is a new instrument, a brain scanner, that can not only find a brain tumor, but also gives the neuro-surgeon vital information on its size and location. For the first time, tumors can be diagnosed i certainity. Surgery is the only cure, but with the information the brain-scanner gives, surgeon can operate with more exact knowledge, making for a greater degree of success. You should rely on what your doctor tells you, Mrs. since he has the information on the tumor, its size and location, and the possibilities of a cure.

Neuro-surgeons have developed a great degree of skill in performing brain a i which are not too di from other operations, although I think we all have a special kind of fear about anything affecting the brain. As for after effects, here again your doctor can advise you on what they are likely to be. i brain surgery, there is naturally a period of healing. During the months after the operation, your husband's thinking a acting will probably show some changes due to the operation, but these will disappear as the healing progresses. Mass Murder During the first year following the Civil War more than 70 Negroes were lynched, some of thum veterans still in uniform.

members of the family. Here are a few safety habits for children: 1. Teach children to walk, never run in the house. Insist that children keep shoes on. Stocking feet offer no resistance to slippery floors.

2. Provide mats outside the front and back doors and teach children to wipe their feet before entering the house. Snow, mud or sticky substances tracked through the house create dangerous areas. 3. Children's toys left carelessly on the floor are a danger to every member of the family.

Insist that toys be picked up and put away immediately after play. You'll make it easier to teach your child to put things away if you provide not just one, but several toy boxes in various parts of the 4. When children spill things, train them to wipe up grease, spilled milk or water, fruit peelings immediately. Provide a roll of paper towels, installed at child height on a wall or cabinet in the kitchen for prompt clean-ups. 5.

If a child breaks any glass object, train him to tell you about it immediately and not to touch it himself. Picking up jagged glass is a job for adults only and which requires extreme care. Use several thickness of paper toweling, even when picking up the larger pieces. For the tiny splinters, dampen a paper towel, place over the glass splinters, and use a pad of dry toweling to protect your fingers. The Wealthy Few Among slave owners at the outbreak of the Civil War, only one-hali of one per cent owned 100 or more slaves.

a rotary beater until sugar is dissolved. Place over boiling water and cook, beating con- for 7 minutes, until frosting holds its shape. Add vanilla. Remove from heat and take out of the frosting; re- I serve. TO REMAINING frosting add 2 3 package semi-sweet choco- late morsels; let stand a few ONE 6-OUNCE package of semi-sweet chocolate morsels, the delicious chocolate that is complete enough to eat "as is," is used to make both the chocolate frosting and the easy but smart decorations for the white-frosted portion of the cake.

Decide in advance how you are going to cut the cakes-whether in squares, rectangles, or diamond shapes--and score them accordingly before decorating the tops. This will give you a pattern within which to work. After you have decorated them, cut and remove from the pan. Since two packages of cake mix fill a jelly roll cake pan too full for Petits Fours size and for frosting in the pan, the recipe advises reserving a portion of the batter from each cake mix. Use the extra batter for a bonus dozen of cupcakes for dessert, lunchbox, or additional tea cakes.

PETITS FOURS Cake: 1 package white cake mix 1 package chocolate cake mix Prepare cakes according to directions on package. Reserve 1 cup batter from each cake. Turn rest of batters at same time into each end of a greased and floured 15 by 10 by 1-inch shallow pan. Bake in a moderate oven (375 degrees) 30 minutes. DUO FROSTING V'z cups sugar 5 tablespoons water 2 teaspoons light corn syrup 2 egg whites teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 6-ounce package (1 cup) semi-sweet chocolate morsels, divided Mix a water, corn syrup, egg whites and salt in 1 top of double boiler.

Beat with minutes to soften morsels. Fold only until blended; frost top of white cake. Spread chocolate cake with reserved frosting. Decorate white frosting with remaining package semisweet chocolate morsels and chocolate frosting with chopped coconut, chopped walnuts and pecan halves. To serve, cut cake into small i a and bar shapes.

Yield: Approximately 6 dozen small cakes. Offer Tips On Wearing Quite Contrary by Mary The Hat's the Thing I am a charter member of the "Let's go bareheaded" dub. I am also a charter member of the "Let's buy more shoes" dub but that has nothing to do with what happened. I just don't care much for hats. Particularly on me.

Hats don't care much for me either. When my Mother feels out of sorts, she goes and buys a new hat. I have friends who react to adverse conditions in the same manner. All that trying on hats does for me is either send me into gales of laughter, which does not endear me to the hat saleswoman, or throw me into a fit of depression that lasts for hours. Consequently, I have two hats.

A summer hat for church and a winter hat for church. The other day I was invited to attend the dedication of the world's largest perfume fountain. I Immediately went into conference with myself on whether or not I had to go hatted. It MABI was a little late for my winter hat and a wee bit early for the summer one. So I proed and conned and came up with my unusual answer.

Go hatless. Then came a small voice, called laughingly common sense, that whispered in my shell-like ear that every other female at the doings was going to be hatted to the hilt. In consternation and turmoil, I called a salon de women's clothes hi our town, told them to pick out all the orange hats in the place as I was going to have about five minutes to shop. I dashed in rather like an orange tornado to find that I had a choice of one. Clapped the thing on my bead and was off to breath perfume.

As the man who sat next to me at the following luncheon giving his krag-and-to4he-point dissertation on the subject of women and hats, I was Inwardly chortling. He was for them. Said that a woman looked so womanly hi hats. Not realizing that I had been looking manly all these years, I am about to become the hat qneea of the north-west lubBrbs. Evei while howling.

Memo to the class of '63: Show off that new class ring to best advantage. Make sure it's sparkling clean, worn on the correct finger, and that it adorns well-groomed hands. Most girls prefer to wean school rings on the right hand, i and you'll find that school crest rings look most feminine when worn on the little finger. A ring deserves its own beauty routine. Dull tarnished rings are no beauty mark.

To keep rings sparkling, soak overnight in a mixture of one tablespoon of detergent to one cup of water. The next morning, rinse the ring in warm running water and polish carefully with a tissue. Remember that hand lotions, soap and dirt create dulling films. Rings should be given a frequent beauty bath. In addition, a quick polish with a tissue several times during the day will keep your ring at its sparkling best.

YOUR NEW school ring deserves the setting of pretty hands, softened by faithful application of your favorite hand softener. Nails should be carefully manicured. Longer nails will glamorize short, stubby fingtrs. If you are blessed with long, tapered nails you can afford to file nails fairly short. Remember that colorful nail polish disguises flaws in nails that are less than perfect.

If you have perfect almond-shaped nails you can afford to show them off with clear translucent nail polish. Joins Committee Mrs. Peter Kalogeras, 300 N. Clark Drive, Palatine, has been named refreshment co-chairman for a spring tea being planned by the Womens Auxiliary of the Greek Archdiocese Welfare Foundation. The event is slated for Saturday, May 4, at 2 p.

m. at the Manor, Central and North Avenues, Chicago. Proceeds will benefit the foundation's Home for the Aged. Guests from the Chicago and suburban areas will see a showing of bridal and "after 5" fashions during the afternoon..

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About The Daily Herald Archive

Pages Available:
470,083
Years Available:
1901-2006