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Daily News from Los Angeles, California • 18

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Location:
Los Angeles, California
Issue Date:
Page:
18
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ariese women turn eyes west American who lives in Orient By GERTRUDE PRICE (Woman Editor) men Eve The attractive young now on leave and visiting In Lon Angeles, serves at general headquarters, office of the chief of staff, In Tokyo. She is said to he one of the highest paid American women serving overseas. Her job Is that of hostess to official visitors. tT This evening at Women's University club on Beverly boulevsrd Captain Alexander will talk informally about Japanese women as she has learned about them. In an interview she pictured Japanese women as being emancipated, legislatively.

Their interests are broadening daily, she ported. And they are giving attention, particularly, to situations on the community level which characters, most of which represent phrases rather than single words, take such a long time to master. And to get an identical meaning in English out of a Japanese phrase is really something. Asked whether the English language has caught on" well in Japan, Captain Alexander responded: "It is not a compulsory subject in the schools. But students show an avid interest in the language and many of them voluntarily make a place for it in their education courses.

Eyeing its economic conditions, the south In ad visitor observed Japan is urgently reaching out for a sufficient foreign market for its goods. She suggested that both the United States and Britain lend halting assistance in this, respect thVwrifsireof'the' "Japanese I probably, in her opinion, because tion, stage, which seems to be an earnest effort to acquire the "know how" of western peoples without losing the "flavor" of oriental living, was another of her comments. Captain Alexander's sojourn in Los Angeles is of great interest to the many local women working untiringly to bring about better understanding' between peoples of all nations. Among these groups of world thinking women is the Womens University club, before which she will speak this evening. The club has recently organized an International Womens department headrd currently by Dr.

Rosalind Goodrich Bates. Dr. Bates, an attorney active in many business and professional groups here, Is a foremost advocate of women's leadership in a program of developing international good- they fear competition in prices. Japan is an interesting place in A which to live in its present transi-will. public.

Captain Alexander, who is quite well known in this city as a former officer in the Womens Lawyers club, related that the women over them are much concerned with the problem of improving their hospitals and their nursing system. The family unit Is as important as ever to the Japanese, she said. She added it is the boast of the nation that it is 80 per cent literate. But education has been largely in the field of reading and writing, she said. Learning to analyse and to think for them-selvea is the hard, new educational process being put Into effect slowly by the people.

Captain Alexander made an interesting statement about the Japanese language. She said the BAR chapter to open season with luncheon Hannah Bushrod chapter DAR, will open its 1949-60 season with a luncheon at 12:30 p. m. Saturday, Oct. 15, at the home of Mrs.

Thomas Gaines, 458 North Edinburgh street, honoring the new regent, Mrs. Lucile Derr Fitts. Those serving with Mrs. Fitts are Mmes. Grace S.

MacDonald, vice-regent: Katherine Houser, chaplain; Miss Anna O. Marshall, recording secretary; Mmes. Sylvia Nelson, registrar; French B. Harrington, historian, and R. L.

Cannon, librarian. Hostesses assisting Mrs. Gaines are Mrs. Charles H. Hightower and Miss Annie Laurie Leech.

Dalle XeVa photo. PARKVIEW WOMAN'S club believes in finding a way to serve its community. An Opportunities box is a novel means' of interesting the membership in active service. Shown here picking an opportunity to servo are, left to right: Mrs. Frantz P.

Clark, financial secretary; Mrs. Richard Nida, recording secretary; and Mrs. Lucian Casey, enthusiastic new president. Martha Grayson Seafood cocktails were strictly. variety of fish both the ehell and 1 fin kinds coincided with the ad- few .51 Dallr Haws shoto.

CAPTAIN EVE Alexander, WAC, formerly active in Los Angeles Lawyers club, now serving at general headquarters, office of the chief of staff, in Tokyo. She has charge of the itinerary and hosting of foreigners visiting in the country during their stay. Shown with her is Dr. Rosalind Goodrich Bates. La Cadena club to hold Mothers club plans meeting and rummage sale Alpha Omicron mothers club of UCLA ia planning a variety of activities during the coming season," the first being a general membership meeting Wednesday, Oct.

12, at 8 p. at 894 Hil-gard avenue. Especially honored at the session will be new pledges and their mothers. Mrs. Haon J.

Tyler, new president, will officiate and introduce her executive board. Serving with her during the coming year Bre Mmes. Fred Braun, first vice president and ways and means chairman; Sidney Marsden, treasurer; Victor Cresap, corresponding secretary; Clarence recording secretary Edwin Rolph, social chairman; Jess Dalzell, hospitality chairman; Arthur C. Healy, publicity chairman, and Laurence L. Rosenthal, auditor and past president.

Also on the agenda for tha new season Is a rummage sale Oct. 17 and 18 In Santa Monica. League names committee to aid Thrift Shop Advisory board to the Assist-4 nounccd, will be to devise ways anniversary meeting First anniversary of the founding of the La Cadena Women's club of Burbank will be celebrated at a meeting Tuesday, Oct. 18, at 8 p. m.

at the Woman's dub. Seventh and Olive streets, Burbank. Mrs. C. M.

Sneden, president of the Los Angeles district, Califor-pt Federation of Womens clubs, and Mrs. Kenneth Rogers, past state Junior advisor, will be guest speakers for the evening. MOT restaurant delicacy until a years ago. Devotees of shrimp, oysters, crab and lobster Inundated in a spicy Bauce used to wait until they visited a restaurant that specialized in aea food then, they Indulged in an eating orgy. In a aea food dinner, the first course usually was (and still is) the favorite one.

A favorite shell fish shrimp, oysters, crab, lobster or clams in a piquant sauce is just the right opening note for a dinner that even pretends to be anything more ambitious than "meat and potatoes. This is tiue even if the. entree is a steak, a roast or chicken. Hie ready availability of a large LSC to hold rummage rally Mrs. Clarence P.

Carter, philanthropy chairman of the Lincoln Study club, will be hoeteas for the rummage rally luncheon at her home, 5549 Verdun avenue, Thursday, Oct. 20, at 12:30 p. m. Mrs. LJoyd A.

Park, president of the club, and the members of the ways and means and philanthropy committees will be guests. Those planning to attend the luncheon include Mmes. J. Carty, George M. Hetrick, H.

C. Witherspoon, Adolph Hocb, H. A. Graham, Charles E. Cody, Earths I.

Loehr, George H. Pratt, W. D. Cleghom, Albert Clerx, M. E.

Wise, Leonard W. Rucker, Walter H. McHenry, John F. Neel, C. D.

Bolwcr and W. (Bill) Emmons. PTA activities vent of frozen foods. This means, of course, that today fish dinners cocktail, entice and salad may be enjoyed in the home every bit as much aa in the most expensive restaurant. The trick is in making aaucea and dressings suitable for the kind of sea food served.

If you are a homemaker whose husband pesters you from time to time to produce a cocktail sauce that haunts hia memory from a long-remembered dinner at some famous aea food restaurant, prove to him that you're a master chef in your own right. We promise you that tha aauce for which we're giving the recipe below ia tantalizing enough to prompt hia surreptitiously dropping his crackers in it, just as ha surely must have done In the restaurant. SEAFOOD COCKTAIL SAUCE 1 teaspoon dehydrated horse radish rup tonutu ketchup or chill eeuce 2 teulespuonx cider or aielt vlne-xxr, or lemon juice 1 Imxpoon Worcettrrrhlre aauco 1 teaspoon crlerjr Mil. Soak horse radish in 2 teaspoons cold water 10 minutes. Add remaining ingredients and mix thoroughly.

Chill and serve over seafood cocktail. (Recipe from H. J. Heinz Co.) Variations: One hAlf cup very finely diced celery may be substituted for celery salt. Two tablespoons India relish may be added.

A good chowder la a versatile dish. It ia a complete meal that may be served for luncheon or supper hearty, satisfying, nourishing. Here are two recipes we highly recommend: SEA FOOD CHOWDER SAUTERNE 2 tableaooona nakarlrtr 4 lebleiuiafii rnliictd onion 1 to 2 cupi coukrd ihrimp, chopped 1 imell can nilncvd clows 1 can mixed vewrtxblrc. drained 2 cupa mrdlnm while sauce Ball and freshly around block Beeper to taete 4 cup MUterne wine Melt margarine in skillet. Add onion, shrimp, dams and vegetables.

Saute together for 5 minutes. Make white sauce. Combine the two mixtures just before serving, season to taxte, stir In the wine. 4 to 6 servings. BEAN CHOWDER and means of aecuring clothing, furniture, hooka and household effects which may be aold at small cost to people of Blender purse, Among those on the advisory board committee are Mmes.

Al-phonzo Bell, Joseph E. Aderhold, Lou Anger, Fercy H. Booth, Hugh Boswell, Edward W. Carter, Robert Cobb, Kenneth Blake, Grant Cooper, Roy A. Curiel, Eugene P.

Daley, Cecil B. Dahl, William Rose Gibbon, Dean Hoover, J. R. La-cayo, Robert H. Moulton, Thomas Malouf, Louis Lieber W.

W. Orcutt, Neil Pctree, Wesley Roberts, Barney C. Ruben, Hunt Stromberg, Blackatone Smith, Thomas W. Simmons, Ralph True-blood, John Stahl, George M. Wal luce and Lewis A.

Weiss. por Nw SOFT SHINING ance League Thrift Shop la the latest group to be organized by the league at a tea and meeting held thia week In the Wilshire Country club. The affair was aoclal as well as philanthropic In tone. Mrs. Joseph E.

Aderhold, Thrift Shop chairman. served aa hostess. Especially honored at thia gathering of prominent women wan the founder-president of the league, Mrs. Hancock Banning. Mada Bouden Walsh haa accepted the post of general co-ordinator of the committee whose immediate job will be to find some method of stocking depleted shelves In the shop.

Last year Mrs. Walsh headed the committee which raised the funds for the erection of the Thrift Shop building at 5612 Santa Monica boulevard. Aim of the new group, it ia an- THE CAROLINA PINES was the setting for a gala party prior to the leaving of newly-weds Mr. and Mrs. Ted Koppelman for a two-week Hawaiian honeymoon.

Among the guesta gathered for the dinner were Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Rosewald, Mr. and Mrs. Marty Fleischer and Mr.

and Mrs. Dave Parka. The Koppelmana will spend a week in Honolulu and then fly over to Hilo. HAIR Manage a small inrniil of SHONTEX me dry ends first, than comb and brush evenly through entiie head of hair. We.

jh rlf net IBIV SHONTEX GO. 1 IHSum CaU. Da. SI Women painters to meet Women Painters of tha West Mrs. Joseph Harding, program HANCOCK PARK SCHOOL PTA win Met In Muter newton todey et 2:18 p.

Win. Peeke, prrxidrnt, will el- chairman. His topic will be The Art of Painting in Chinese Life. Kenneth Ross will speak briefly on "Art Coordination in Lea Angeles. Tha Women Fa inters of the West will exhibit during the month of October at the Long Beach Recreational Center.

'e The October board meeting of the group will be held at the home of Genevieve Beecher, 119 South Ardmore avenue, Thursday, Oct. 20, at 11:30 a. m. Margaret Johnson will be cohoBtess. will meet at Ebell Club, Thursday, Oct IS, for luncheon.

Irma At-t ridge, president will officiate at this regular meeting. Dr. Yu Shan Han, professor of history at UCLA, will be introduced as afternoon speaker by DLEdvrards'Dffers COMPUTE RELIEF taCOnSTIFOTil the clogging, TRANSIENT kind! Whenever undigested food clogs I the intestines and causes constipation with its bad breath, lack of jpep, sallow akin take Dr. Edwards Oliva STOCK MARKET INVESTORS and TRADERS D. I.

HAYES Registered lavestmeet Adviser) First Class Free. All Invited. 7 ts p. e. This courts it a complete, concite and practical aouna dctiqnsd to moot ilia soadt' af the qaseral publia at wall at experienced lavetion and Traders.

Thit courts includst: 1 How to invott ia the stock aad bond market, and bow to rocoqniso profit opportunities. 2 Wksa end what to buy aad eoll. I How to tpot Special Situation! for qiiicli prefiti. 4 Frofetiional Wall Stroaf Methods and' Formulas. Learn Swinq Inveitinq and Trodinq now for present markets.

6 Speculative and investment stocks selected to earn while leerninq in clast. 19 WEEKLY LESSONS WITH FORECASTS AND COUNSEL 45.00 FUST LICTUM H(l 7 P. M. (Fc casts at Wat Market) 101 ANOELISl Class nuats task Tueiday availing, bsginaing Ckfohor II, at the Angalat Univarsity 711 W. I7k Las Angelas, Calif.

LONO BKACH: Class maet each Wadaeiday aveaing, baginning October 12, at tko Lang Reach Masoiic Tamale. IH Locust Uaj laarh, Calil. FASADINAi Clast meats each Thursday owning, beginning October IS, at tha Pasadena Athletic Club, 4IS E. Grata Pasadena Calif. AN DIEGOi Class meets each Friday evening, beginning October It, at tha Chamber of Commerce (roadway at Columbia San Dugs, Cant.

I Lessens available by mail for out at town students I IMPOOVI VOU INCOMI. UNIVEISiTT ClfDITS IF DESIRES. Ffcoao HI-1304 or write P. O. lei 3147, Hollywood 28, Calif.

Itudy for Markot Opportssitioi Loan aad lari Naw Pint Night Free Forocoat ef 94V Mori firlete et the merlins end the tee end toe ml hour which will follow. HOOVR STREET PTA will hold mrettne ol the executive board todey et 10 e. m. et Ihe school 00 BERENDO JUNIOR HIGH PTA wlU havi Mri. JoMph Note.

Griffith CounrU Cheei chairmen, ee enrat aarakcr et tlia meet-las Tureday. Ort. li, et s. m. In Ilia school auditorium.

a DORSET PTA will mart today et the school el 7.30 p. m. 00 kKiUUX MEETING of Trtallr turret PTA will be held Thurrdey, Ort. 13, et 3 p. et the school.

OOP rumaoA school pta win neid meet ids Thunder. Ort. 13. el 1:30 p. m.

In Urn school auditorium. 00 ORimN AVENUE PTA executive board will nirel Thunder. Oct. 13. et 1 e.

m. et Ihe school. Mr J. P. Heaerescy, prrtldrnt, will officiate.

a a WEST HOI4LYWOOD PTA martini will take plare Thunder. Ort. 20. et 12 nooa In the school Mi. B.

Ever, president, will officials. 0 0 RIVERSIDE DRIVE PTA WlU mel today el the school et 3 p. m. 0 0 LAUREL PTA will meet Thursday, Oct. 13, el 1.30 p.

m. et tha school. f.S J. nr SIERRA FARK VTA Will held Its frit ill mrrtfni in the school Thursday, Ock J. el 1:15 p.

pi. Mrs Bolrtte Burition, rwrnl. will hr the ip-ek-r. pound bacon 1 mpdiuei oiiMw. finely chopped IVh cups canned lometoca 2 cane (I -lb.

ilxrl baked keens 4 cups water 2 medium potalora. cubed Bolt and pepper Dice bacon; fry In a heavy saucepan; remove from pan when crisp. Chop onions; add to bacon fat and cook slowly 5 minutes. Add tomatoes, baked beans, water and potatoes. Season with salt and pepper.

Simmer for one hour. 6 servings. (Recipe -from Van Gamp.) NOTE: If you feel adventurous and hava a taste for Old World cookery, substitute cup of beer for one of the four cupa of water called for In recipe above. Amu Emm eraaky every month'? Are you troubled by distress ef (um functional periodic disturbances? Does this nisha you feel so tired, hlsh-otning, nrrrour at surh time? Then so try Lydls B. Pink-barn's Vegetable Compound to relievo surh symptoms! Pinkhsm'e Compound ia mads eapectally for women.

It also bos what Doctors cell a stomachic tools eOectl Any dnipetnew. 'lydia e. nmiuurs SSSSl For years, Dr. F. U.

Edwards. a noted Ohio Doctor, relieved hia constipated patients with hia OUva Tablets now sold by all drugstores. Olive Tablets are strictly aO vegetable. They work on both upper and lower bowels and clean waits from entire intestinal tract giving you tompkU talujaction, and Atverflenient. OCT.

11. 1T4) '7,.

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Pages Available:
285,523
Years Available:
1923-1954