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Pittsburgh Post-Gazette from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania • Page 8

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Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
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8
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Vifamins Galore PAGE 8 PITTSBURGH POST GAZETTE: February 29. 1944 Healthful Raw Foods Should Be Included In Children's Salads By Lettice Strectt 'l J-O ARE YOU TEACHING your Are vou startine earlv to small ones to enjoy saiaas educate their young palates to relish the crisp, healthful goodness of fresh raw lettuce, chickory, romaine and parsley in' combination with fresh fruits and vegetables? If not, please mend your menu man ners right away because these foods are all great aemana by the growing bodies of your youngsters. i mi iiirnn.iii. jmn ct I KHIMKI IIIIM II T-llH J. I Willi mM Jl tu.

1 1 Vans Br-- r' i VJ A 1 ffiUpkL "I- it in. 1 1 a VU I I American diets are likely to be top-heavy with starchy foods. That is, they contain. day by day, more rice, bread, hominy, macaroni, spaghetti, potatoes. candy, sweet drinks and sweet desserts, than they do foods that are made up chiefly of protein and those that have a higher min Lettice Streett eral and vitamin content.

When a baby is given three meals a day he usually eats cereal for breakfast, potatoes, or rice or hominy for his lunch, plus a starchy dessert such as rice or bread pudding. He often lias addition at these meals toast, crackers or cookies. These foods. with the carbohydrate found in his other daily dishes such as milk and eggs, amply fulfill his dairy starch requirements. For this reason some pediatricians ask mothers to give their husky babies a green vegetable at supper time instead of cereal.

Evening Meal Later on a child may eat a fresh salad at his evening meal. A good standard supper menu is as fol lows Soup, crackers or toast, with butter and honey, salad, milk. stewed fruit if the salad has been made of vegetables; junket, blanc mange, or the like, if fruit has been given. Why are salad foods so impor tant to the young body? Well, A i si rAi'Wran iO Or WI7U e7" aid to the children of France. Tictured, left to right are: Roberta Hanson; Marj- Ann Yohe, Anne Forncrook and Carol Curtis, four of the j-ounjf aides.

Injt and selling song and story hooks of France to secure, funds for Friedelind Wagner Tells St Of Her War Against Hitler HfesteStfajgjjijJI i 111111 Polly Recommends daughter Friedelind, which means "gentle peace." But in her brief life she has not had "much chance to live up to its promise," College Alumnae Arrange Benefits For Early Spring By Anne Ryan Lesh DATES FOR SPRING BENEFITS are beginning to emerge in the social news that up to now has consisted principally of information about war work and weddings. Sweet Briar College alumnae decided at a meeting last week, to sponsor a rummage sale on May 4 in the Farmer's Miss Wagner told the Twentieth Century Club yesterday when she spoke on "A Price On My Head." Born in 1918, during the period between wars Miss Wagrner said "I was fighting my own little war, and Dressmaker touches on this hilky frock of mat jorsry are a soft bow tied at the throat and loose flowing sleeves with tight wristbands. It's a cool, comfortable, crease-resisting dress, a pa kabtf one, just made for visits to one's husband in service. Notice the jet buttons, so important this year, to be matched with jet earrings and the black patent leather belt, calling for patent leather shoes. The hat modeled is a Victorian type, with parasol brim, a California offering.

The dress may be had in beige with black and in aqua-with-black stripes, in a Pittsburgh store. For further information rail Polly, Atlantic 6100, or send her a stamped, self-addressed envelope in care of the Post-Gazette. Roemhild-Canning Service In Berkshire Street Home because they contain vitamins ga lore, minerals needed for growtn and repair, and regulatory bulK which is essential if a child is early to form the healthy habit of elimination at the same time every day. Puret Simple Facts It is no temporary food fad that makes me urge you to give your child salads, because pure and simple facts proven by research are behind my plea to you. Suffi cient daily amounts of fresh veg etables and fruits are essential to superior health! If your youngsters do not like salads, and tip tilt their snub noses at them with lofty disdain it is likely to mean two things: (1) You did not start early enough to teach them to like fresh raw foods.

(2) You do not give them sal ads that are tasty and pretty. Make young salads as gaudy as possible. Be liberal in the use of cherries, arrange eggs, fruits and vegetables in fancy flower designs Make "birds' nests" of shredded lettuce, filled with vegetable "eggs" or cream cheese "eggs tinted with artificial coloring. Use a variety of tasty dress ings. Plain cream seasoned with cinnamon and sugar and poured over lettuce and pear salad is de licious.

No food is appealing if the cook lacks imagination and wilted salads are not fit for a chicken to peck on! Your child, and your entire family, will enjoy their' food more, and be healthier, too, IT you educate them all into eating your cleverly combined, de licious and patriotic American salads! ROEMHILD of Berkshire street their daughter. Miss Janet Erbe H. Canning, Army of the United Canning of Stanford University, home of the bride's parents last the Northside Unitarian Church, officiating. The bride -is a graduate of the University of Michigan and Sergeant Canning was graduated from Stanford University and attended the graduate school of the University of Michigan. Moses-Jacobson Mr.

and Mrs. Leo A. Moses of Forbes -street have announced the marriage of their daughter. Miss Hermoine N. Moses of the WAVES, United States Naval Reserve, to Lieutenant Saul Arthur Jacobson, United States Army, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Morris Jacobson of Mun-hall road. The wedding took place on December 29, 1943, in the officers-lounge of Suitland Hall, in Suit-land, where the bride is now stationed. Mrs. Jacobson attended the Art Institute of Pittsburgh and Carnegie Institute of Technology.

Lieutenant Jacobson attended the University of Pittsburgh and is now stationed at Camp Edwards in Massachusetts. Miss Arch Engaged Dr. and Mrs. Francis J. Arch of Perryview avenue announce the engagement of their daughter.

Miss Isabelle Arch, to Petty Officer First Class Eugene P. Shat-lock, United States Naval Reserve, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Shat-lock of Munhall. Miss Arch is a senior in Mt.

Mercy College. Mr. Shatlock attended St. Vincent's College at Latrobe. After a year in the Southwest Pacific he is at present assigned to the Navy V-12 program for study in Columbia University.

New York. MR. AND MRS. EDMUND O. announce the marriage of Koemhild to Sergeant John biaies, son or Mr.

and Mrs. John B. and Washington, D. C. The wedding took place in-the Honor Worthy Matron The Officers Club of Electa Chapter.

Order of the Eastern Star, will honor Mrs. Mollie Smith, worthy matron, at the annual dinner party tonight at 8 o'clock, in Thursday morning, with the Reverend Hugh W. Weston, minister ot Something for the Family1. in a shirtwaist drcsi with a Oilisnn cirl look. the Copper Ilnm 0f the Roosevelt Hotel.

Cards vU! follow dinner. Mrs. Katherinc associate matron, and Mrs. F.r. jv.a Thompson, associate concut are charge of the affair.

SILVER SHORE 4S-0I, can 2-lb. 5 iar 10 tall 84 cans 25-lb. sack 1.03 25 17 bot. lbs. 32 I 'rib.

bet. 25-01, jar 15 II 29 IS lb. At Ml HO. 1.2 49 cans 'IS-13 IT-oi. jar 16 BRAND 2-lb.

37 Jar 21 OF CHAMPS pkgs. GRAPEFRUIT JUICE PEANUT GUTTER VAN CAMP'S MIK CRESCENT FLOUR Students in Winchester- I 'Thurston School are exhibit- Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Mundo of Beechwood boulevard.

Wed in West Tn thp Arcadia (California) Community Church, at 5 o'clock on February 13, Miss Mary Louise Hnhhs riaue-hter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Hobbs, became the bride of Lieutenant Malcolm Hay Moore of Sewickley. The Reverend H. mho lSKe, as sisted by the Reverend Clarke Breeze, officiated at the double ring ceremony.

A program of organ music by Jane Dougherty was followed by violin music, played by Mrs. Roberta Groninger Nowlin. The bride wore ivorv satin with a train and a full length veil and carried a shower bouquet of gardenias, white sweetpeas and baby nyacintns. In the bridal party were Mrs. Jean Marshall Gates and Mrs.

Anne Townsend Sparling, wearing matching gowns of blue chiffon. They carried talisman roses. Mrs. Arlene Hobbs, sister-in-law of the bride, wore peach chiffon and ear ned blue delphinium. The bridegroom had Douglas Jardine of Pasadena, California, for best man.

and his ushers were Lieutenant John Fields. Barker Cates and Samuel M. Hobbs. A recention in the home of the bride followed the ceremony, and the bride and bridegroom left then for the Yosemite auey. Lieutenant Moore, a son of Mrs.

Hubert Moore of Sewickley. and his bride will live in Rio del Mar, near Camp McQuaide, where he is stationed. Ohio State Club Ends Drive For Alumnae House At the meeting of the Women's Club of Ohio State University on Saturday in the Congress of Clubs, the campaign for funds for the Alumnae Scholarship House in Columbus. will be concluded. Th wtion of officers for the cominsr vear will be held.

Mrs. Arthur Van Meter, who has been serving as president of the group, will terminate her active association with the club at thi meeting, as she will shortly join her husband in Chicago. The hostesses at tne meeting will be Miss Elizabeth Frost, Mrs. E. J.

Carter and Miss Frances George. Navy. Mothers Party A luncheon and card party will be given by the East Boroughs Navy Mothers' Club tomorrow in Rosenbaum's Home Arts Studio. SWANSDOWH CAKE FLOUR BROOKS' VICTORY SAUCE PURE CANE SUGAR BLUE LABEL KARO VICTORY MUSTARD LA FRANCE POWDER PAN AMERICAN COFFEE DOLE PINEAPPLE GEMS 2 HIOLETS G8RH BAKED BEAF1S ELDERBERRY JELLY WHEATIES BREAKFAST was a war against Hitler. secretly.

In 1937 she was able to go to England again where she studied music and stage directing and met Toscanini, who was "like a second father" to her. In 1938 Miss Wagner had to return to Germany as shs was not of age. but she was "treated as a criminal" at home, and found the Gestapo was watching her. In the fall she went to Paris and escaped arrest by a few days. Her mother's friends spread reports of her being a spy, a traitor and dangerous.

In Switzerland when the war broke, she resisted many attempts to have her return to Germany. As a final resort Hitler and Himmler sent her mother to persuade her, and gave her several alternative courses, including being "destroyed and exterminated." By good fortune she was able to get to England instead, because as she pointed out to her mother "This war is not one of nationalists but of ideologies." Interned in England as an enemy-alien, through the efforts of Toscanini arrangement were made to bring her to the United States. Delayed in getting an exit permit Miss Wagner said "The British public helped me. They WTOte letters to the editor, and actually forced a debate in the House of Commons." In 1941 she finally sailed for South America, applied for the quota there, and arriving in the United States in the evening, applied for citizenship papers the next morning. Marian Martin Pattern Pattern 9083 may be ordered in sizes Small (32-34).

Medium (36-38). Large (40-42). Small size takes 1 yard 35-inch fabric. This pattern, together with a needlework pattern of useful and decorative motifs for linens and garments, 20c. Send 20c in coins for these patterns to Post-Gazette, 114 Pattern Department.

232 West ISth SU New York 11, N. Y. Write plainly size, name, address, style number. Ten cents more brings our 1944 Marian Martin Spring Pattern Book. New.

easy-to-make styles. Free Pattern printed in book. Patterns are available by mail only. Allow two weeks for delivery. mm rR 11 ft i li I i ml wm MM it turned out to be prophetic for it Now, waiting for her final papers to make her an American citizen.

Miss Wagner said she came to the United States, not by the Mayflower but by strato-clip- per and that "it feels good to be here. You. who were born here, she said, "don't know what it means to me it is like Paradise opening up." Speaking quietly and dispassion ately, the blond young grand daughter of Richard Wagner and great-granddaughter of franz Liszt, told her life story, from her first meeting with Hitler in 1923, when he failed to impress the 5-year-old, since at that time, she said, "he tickled my sense of humor." Her mother, British born, was an early follower of Hitler, although her father, until his death in 1930, tried "to talk her out of it." At the age of 15 Miss Wagner found she "had to make decisions." When she refused to give up friends because1 of politics or race, her mother called her a "traitor." "The Germans took the sad course," Miss Wagner said. "I feel they were not as guilty of Hitler's arrival as of his staying in power. There was no opposition.

Some laughed Naziism away. I Others felt it a losing battle and compromised. I felt a losing battle was better than not fighting at all." Miss Wagner answered questions frequently put to her about Hitler, for during his many visits to the Wagner home in Bayreuth she had opportunity to "watch him from many sides." She admitted he has "power," but when she was younger she could not understand "the strange things people did when they met Hitler." As she grew older she realized "they were unwitting victims," and that the Germans were "under a crazy influence a mass hypnosis." As Hitler grew In power and Miss Wagner continued her "private war" things at home became unhappy. She refused to join the Youth Movement, and was sent from one school to another where she "opposed the education" and questioned the teachers who "were all little dictators." After she had been sent to England to school she didn't go back to Germany until her father's death, and then her mother refused to let her return to England and sent her to a Protestant convent where "history lessons were all fights" and she quarreled with the Kaiser's grand daughter. She had to study music Enlists With Marines At a party in her home last Thursday night announcement was made of the enlistment in the United States Marine Corps of Miss Ruth.

Stander, daughter of Mrs. Hilda C. Stander and the late Harry A. Stander of the Northside. Marine seals tied to red.

white and blue corsages contained tn message. Miss Stander will leave shortly for Camp Lejeune. N. for her basic training. P.

T. A. Hobby Show The Greentree Parent-Teacher Association will hold a hobby and antique show tonight at 8 o'clock, in the school. The Hall's Grove Parent-Teacher Association will meet Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Miss Rose Leiter will speak of "Gifts from Many Lands." Mrs.

S. Mc-Cune will be soloist. Victory Gardens Marion Black Williams, garden editor of the Post-Gazette, will talk to the Beaver Garden Club tonight in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Wallace of River road, on "Victory Gardena." JUarKei in onenuan sveuur, mm give the money to the alumnae scholarship fund, something they do with each year's proceeds.

Mrs. John F. Tim, is general chairman of the project. Smith Club Aides The Smith College Club of Pittsburgh has chosen five young high BChool girls who expect to attend Smith within th next year or two to aides at the benefit performance of Borrowed Time" in the Pittsburgh Playhouse on March 8. This event, too.

will give its proceeds to a fund to finance a girl's education at Smith. The aides named are Janet Best. Susie Hare and Evelyn Spear of Pittsburgh, and Sally Church of Mt. Lebanon and Peggy Plummer of Carnegie. Miss Church and Miss Plummer will have a part in the War Bond program.

Both will enter Smith as "granddaughters" of the college, the title given to girls whose mothers also attended Smith and were known as daughters of their alma mater. Benefit Fashion Shine A spring fashion show will be the highlight of the Tuesday Musical Club dessert bridge in the Hotel Schenley on Tuesday. March 21, at 12:30 o'clock. The outstanding social event of the club year, the annual benefit card party, gives part of its proceeds for the luh scholarship fund. Mrs.

U. M. Heath and Mrs. Donald F. Rohrer.

chairmen of the rartv. announce their selection of the heads of committees. Mrs. J. Kennedy Irwin will be in charge of table arrangements, and Mrs.

Samuel Johnston wm over ee the food table. C.av and unusual aprons are be Ing made for sale by Mrs. W. C. Dierks and Mrs.

Alvan Sherrill and their committee, and Mrs. Philip Crittenden will head the committee on prizes. Mrs. Mae Kober Ladley asks that members contribute sugar to be made into candy and sold by her choral committee. Harvard Chapel Service Emily Frances Eaton, daughter Mr.

and Mrs. George C. Eaton of Belmont. Massachusetts, will be married on Friday to Lieutenant Charles J. Mundo.

United States Army Signal Corps, who is stationed at Monmouth. New Jersey. The ceremony will be performed at 4 o'clock in the afternoon in the Memorial Chapel at Harvard University. Lieutenant Mundo is a son of CS4 red' 1 BAUR'S Gnrii STREAMLINE MARKETS Ben Avon Y. W.

To Celebrate Anniversary The Ben Avon Chapter of the Young Women's Christian Association is celebrating its thirty-fifth anniversary tomorrow at 2 o'clock in the Ben Avon United Presbyterian Church. An original program picturing some of the highlights during the thirty-five years will be presented. The primary purpose of this organization at the time of its founding was to assist with the furnishing of the new Y. W. C.

A. building in Chatham street, Pittsburgh. It was also to provide an organization where women of all churches, clubs and groups could meet on common ground for fur thering the best interests of young women. Today there is a mem bership of 125, with many committees active in the work of the Y. W.

C. A. With the inauguration of a Girl Reserve program the chapter encouraged and spon sored the Girl Reserve Club in the Ben Avon High school. For many years the women maintained a tennis court for young people in the borough, and the past two summers they have initiated and supervised summer playgrounds for younger children. They also publish a servicemen news letter dispatched to every man and woman of the community in service on the far-flung battle fronts.

The chapter has also cooperated with Central Branch in maintaining the Business Girls' lounge in the Granite building. During the summer months when regular meetings are not in session, one of the delightful features sponsored by the chapter has been the discussion groups on Wednesday mornings under the willow trees in Mrs. Carlton Jan-sen's garden. Members of the Women's Club of Carnegie Institute of Technology will meet in the club house tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock, to hear Stuart Chapman, associate professor of history, speak on "What Should Democracy Mean to Us?" Uxority Club members, their husbands and friends, will visit the Buhl Planetarium on Saturday night. From 7:30 to 3:30 o'clock Dr.

Peter Gray will give a demonstration-lecture on "The Human Machine." At 8:30 o'clock the group will see the sky show featuring "Life on Other Worlds," after which will follow a Micro Zoo show. I You can go far in business with training! Continuous Enrollment in Secretarial and Business Training Courses High School Subject for Credit PITTSBURGH ACADEMY 531 Wood St. AT. 7 1 77 A MARK OF GOOD A URNITURE BY A HI l'- I Stores Are Located is East Liberty North Sic Jlfjjll jjfa if If you count your chairs before inviting guests, then solve your where-to-sit problem this way. Shown are two types that will fit into any room and add that certain "something" that is charm, color and comfort combined.

Left, Regency Shield back, with grace in every lovely line. Right, Tador with fluted Both have walnut finished frames, are upholstered in your choice of decorator's fabrics priced at 9.95 each. Aunt Hannah's Bread Carnep South Side.

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