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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 19

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 19

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
19
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

BROOKLYN EAGLE, WED, FEB. 2, 1949 19 i dre Oifig What Socieh Right for Now in When You're in Browsing Mood By MARGARET MARA At the next burgeoning of a browsing mood, for complet satisfaction visit the Long Island Historical Society at Plem pont and Clinton Sts. Paintings and sculpture and the collectio FOR THE MEN, Winter may be a dreary lot-but women always have their hats to help rush along the season and make the days exciting. On top of millinery news for Spring is the bright young sunkist color, bark. Sadye Lands-mail, director of the millinery salon at Balch Price, thinks a great deal of it and shows it here in two straws.

At the right is double beret of shining straw braid trimmed with red velvet gardenias that lie rather flat on top but cluster at the sides to add width. BARK takes the spotlight below in dainty pari-buntal. The off-the-face brim curls back softly with small red velvet flowers gathered thickly at both sides. These are gay hats to lake our minds off Winter. of mementos associated with the history of I.

oU x' 'e JT Hiss Grace Dolowitz, Dr. Levitt to Marry jj Mk Grace li. Dolowitz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alexander.

of 718 Cortelyou Road and Cold Spring, N. will jj become the bride of Dr. Jesse M. Levitt, son of Mrs. Miriam B.jf of 750 Ocean Ave.

and the late Dr. Marcus J. Levitt, 6n; Sannay I'nion Temple. Thej "if 11" Dr. Sidney Tedesche will otolaryngology.

He served in, The ceremony will he' the Army during the war at 1 these surroundings are a small part of the ft i i by the immediate fain- Walter Heed Hospital and in jii.ihi ii i wmj-iw twin 1 society's riches. The library is the Fort Knox of Brooklyn. There are 110.000 volumes on the shelves and among them are 10,000 volumes on American genealogies. Many well known writers as research workers visit the library and the daily listings in the guest book reveal visitors from great distances. Old framed prints on the walls are quite fascinating.

For example there is an artist' conception of the scene of the Grand Temperance Encampment in Bushwick in 18 when Bushwick was a separate community The scene looks pretty gala for temperate folk, with banners and flags flying and spanking I wo and Korea. Mis Stella Villain). Ho.owilz was a Mieni- ft Margaret Mara learns of horses hitched to carriages. Norton. Mass.

She is an'ward A. Healy To Wed i lunula 'the Packer Collegiate Mr. and Mrs. Dominick and Bryn Mawr Col-, la no of 1777 W. 7th at a ios win-re she' received also I party given in their home last her M.

and Ph. ID. degrees. Saturday night, announced the H) the University of engagement of their daughter, a fellowship from! Miss Stella Villano. to Edward I'tyii A College and also! A.

Healy, son of Mrs. Edward In Frame for a year. In A Healy of 125 11th St. i'--e war vie served three jears Miss Villano was graduated i a ot'iHi' of Strrt 'gii' t'lnm Girls Commercial High ve in Washington. D.

School, and Mr. Healy, a grad-cnid in London. uate of Fort Hamilton High Once in Two Rooms The Long Island Historical Society was founded in 1863 ano its first quarters were taken up in two rooms at Court an'- Joralemon Sts. It moved to thei Arthur Train's i succinct: Dr. Levitt is an ophthalmolo- School, is now associated with rm i ami author.

On the alteiidvthe Bethlehem Steel Company 5 -tafi's of the Brooklvn Eve- Far Hospital. Kingston, Dorothy Marie Twins Aviaiue Hospital, and Jewish Engaged to Mr. McElfresh Itn-iural ol lirooklyn. tie is Robert. Twiss.

nf Fast I tinirrnrrrMiMfimr HiiwMiiiijjiiuiiouMiiu oi sne Anu-iiian dJ, Orange, announces the engage- I ligation. uo M.Mriment of hpr daughter. Miss L. o' Surgeons ami Twiss to Jnhn Guild to Celebrate Dressing Up Arj.I. my of Ophthalmology andjEdward McElfresh.

son of Mrs. Stanley McElfresh. of Garden The 38th anniversary of imposing red stone building it iow occupies in 1881. One of the most fascinating collections in the library is composed of 6,000 bookplates They include heraldic and name-label bookplates. Among the name labels in the collection are those of President James A.

Garfield and Francis Scott Key. Other bookplates bear inscriptions. Sir Walter Scott's bookplate reads: "Read this book and please return it. This may seem a strange request but I have found from experience that, while many of my friends are poor mathematicians, they are nearly all good "Send me hack to Arthu Train sometime." Xot Mathematics Sign in a corset shop on Mar hattan Beach "Problem Figures Are Id Problem to y.s." Dog Had His Day With pets barred from hou ing developments, and largi housing projects increasing rap idly, the A. S.

P. C. A. foresees tremendous drop in the city' dog population. Manage Amundsen of the Brooklyn dl vision reports an all-time lov in the dog census due to th four-year rabies scare, just enr ed, during which the Board Health barred the A.S.

P. C.A from giving away for adoptioi dogs picked up on the streets. Woman's Guild of Christ "R-nttt1 Church Bay Ridge will be JjUWl brated at the regular meeting For Dinner of the organization tomorrow afternoon. Mrs. John Crain, chairman for the day, has announced a program of music.

iCity. and the late Mr. McEl-. fresh. Miss Twiss, daughter of the late Robert H.

Twiss. is a graduate of Edgewood Park Junior College and is with the research library of the General Electric Company. i Mr. McElfresh, a graduate of iPeddie School, attended the I University of Michigan and was jgraduated from Union College I where he a member of Psi iUpsilon. He served overseas as a first lieutenant with the Ninth Air Force.

mm i-l By EI.SA STEIN BERGER Food Editor We spoke yesterday of soup for dinner. Soup, however, is Mrs. Muscatel Hostess seldom served plain, without an accompaniment oi some son. A bridge was given by Mrs.Thehe may vary widely They cooking time. The barley will, of course, take longer.

Ready to eat cereals or pop corn are Alfred Muscatel of 131 Dahlgrenj may he simple or more elabo-Place for the benefit of the: rate for special dinners, nursery of the Angel Guardian the simplest, of is a selection of toasted Home recently at the Mu.scateljp,ajn backers; small ones usual-residence. Forty guests attend-My that do not crumble too 7 just the right touch for man; soups. The green of finely choppei chives or leek when in season odds both color and flavor. attractive sprinkled over the Martin-Jackson Marriage Announced Mr. and Mrs.

Edward J. Martin, of Garden City, announce much when vou bite them. An- ed. (other simple idea is to quickly piain crackers in salted 1 fTN- rl jt water, then place on a baking March of Dimes Show Presents enu top in place of croutons. Tiny rolls or hot biscuits, especially those that have a salty or spicy flavor are delicious.

Pastry sticks made either piain or of cheese pastry, garlic French bread, small corn sticks may be used too. Try raw vegetable strips. To Garnish In addition to an accompaniment, a garnish can also add to the flavor of the soup. Some of the cream soups take nicely to the engagement of their daughter. Miss Ruth Martin, to Donald B.

Jackson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Burney Jackson, of Roosevelt. Miss Martin was graduated from Garden City High School and attended Immaculata Junior College, Washington, C. Mr.

Jackson, a graduate of Hempstead High School, attended Pace College. New York. Pot Roast with Cranberries Green Beans Mashed Potatoes Orange and Cabbage Salad Ice Cream and Cookies Pot Roast Wkh Cranberries 3'i pounds rolled chuck roast 3 teaspoons salt until crisp and puffy, which takes only a few minutes. Croutons are tiny bread squares browned in fat on all sides, then put into the soup just as it is to be served. Placing the squares in a frying basket Spring Fashions; 'Flya ways' Attractive By GERTRUDE McALLISTER favored were the flyaway -back iThere were seven scenes for Woman's Editor boleros for suits and dress jack- which seven of our most famous Without a doubt the fashioniets- Molded to the figure in artists created the sets.

Scene I show "Scenes of Spring" pre-f 0111 the flya ways seem to have presented a country scene of Aliman Pack Studio Florence M. Smith Jam. 1. Gilligan 'J c. Weil Miss Smith Lord cottons, se.HL-u jeMCMwv in uie uau- deep hot fat for a minute to create a ing against a painting by Grandma Miss Hope Granat room oi ine ior urn i ncpiiipnt has been; Moses.

"The Hoosick alley ook. Sleeves are and brace two, is the easiest way to get them uniformly brown on all the March of Dimes, was one of Hip PiiMPPmpnl of Will Wert on Sunday a spoonful of nipped or sourj ream. If you are using the; whipped cream, add salt instead: of sugar for this. 'nrt, lv Sill ill ll'luln let length in these jackets. ii, u.irie Aii Hooe Granat.

daushter the best such affairs ever given i i sides. tillU 1 dl-AUUll IlilOUTJ bay leaves 4 whole cloves 2 cups cranberries Wipe roat with damp cloth Rub well with salt. Sear on al. sides. Add remaining ingredients.

Cover; reduce flame to simmer and cook 30 minutes to the pound. Yield: six servings. iter ot l.ouis a. Minun i. uranai, novt -Puff She Good And thougn the hatwing coats: particularly for evening Diner nrjtl-z fnr ha mir uoa hor 1 wear.

n- Village and the latejof 1 Regent Lawrence, will r- Kathleen E. Smith, to'he married on Sunday, to i. Giiligan. son of S. Broder.

son of Mr. and Giiligan of Brooklyn! Mrs. Abraham Broder of 46 late John J. Giiligan. Woodmere Woodmere.

Smith attended St. Ag- The ceremony wil be performed cH.LIdl.lfU dUfllllOll, CVtfl LlllIC the fitted coat with graceful Chopped parsley or a few leaves of watercress add flavor and color. For pea soup you might like to try mint leaves. Bouillon is attractive with a very few shreds of vegetables cooked until just tender. Car-tot, celery and green pepper are especially attractive.

Lemon or cucumber slices are cause this was the fifth year that the city's top fashion people have rustled up the show for the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, it had all the appeal of a Broadway production plus the most exciting and expensive clothes the city's dressmakers are capable of producing. 1 can't sav I've ever Very tiny cream puff shells offer another suggestion. For these use only teaspoonful of the dough. They will hake very quickly. Rice, noodles, barley and other cereals or tiny dumplings are often cooked directly in the soup for th; last few minutes of Party Clothes Another wonderful setting was "The Lights Go an after-five scene for which Saul Steinberg did one of his spectacular caricature scenes.

Two Aralemv. Rockville Cen- at 1 p.m. in the Hotel Pierre flaring skirt showed up, it seemed to be preferred for actual wear. The big color was blue, in variations on navy such as Sum anil was a member of Al Roof by Rabbi Edward T. Sand- "GOING PLACES?" PHONE MA.

4-6200 FOR IDEAS 9 A.M.-5 P.M. Tan Sigma sorority. Dur- 1 Irow. A reception will follow, i Miss Granat will be attended war she was associated mer Smoke, anri we emess it nninori with can- ,1.: iinAicis aMftni seen aiijuimg oeuer man imWin by popular acclaim. delabra and as thev held the 1 The show flowed from candles close to the Quickly, though, before we; huge gold and coral velvet cur-get into all the celebrities andjtained stage of the Continued on Following Page the wonderful staging, we'd like i fftarij JJauortli 5 t0 flea Mother -he Federal Bureau of In-.

by Miss Lennore Walcher as Mr. Giiligan waslmaid of honor. Xorman Broder f.idnat-'"! from La Salle Acad-jvvill be his brother's best man iiv. Mai, hattan, and attenrlediand usher? will include William "ollege before enter--Shefllin and Harold Stahl. Navy.

Associated withiGerard Granat, brother of the Manhattan engineering firm, bride-to-be, and Frank Schef-i- attending Pace College, fler. to note the audience reaction to the advance Spring styles that came down the runway. Highly I flp 1 CfJ InOLSIJOOJv! DEAR MARY HAWORTH Almost 20 years The Nurse's Notebook New Mother Plans Her Day mother. He adored my mother and often says that nobody else could take her place. She was wonderful, an old-fashioned woman who lived for the happiness and welfare of her children, and I can understand why Bill con ago, at the age of 15, I married a pre-medical student, IS, whose wealthy widowed mother forced to pait two months later, by threatening to us Contemporary Auxiliary Gives Better Comment Than Ever Paity disinherit the bridegroom as she could under the term-, 'of his father's will unless" By AXE M.

GOODRICH, R. X. (Prepared bj the Visiting use Association nf Brooklyn as a 'service to friends and patients of the organization.) he gave me up and resumed with moss green veiling: Mrs. Henry Abrami. treasurer and chairman of reservations, in a changeable'burgundy taffeta frock, with a shiny TH DAVIS Editor, Huisier and better than ever New babies are so very small that it is sometimes hard toj his studies linatrino the hraif thev ran ransp imnn their arrival in thei I u-nc si, hurt thnt I Ipt him was the mid- oia siraw cnapeau mmraea wan a matcn.ng household Koth father and mother generally feel that their ribbon: Mrs.

Joseph 0 Connor, assistant treas-i infnnt thn mnet mPmhor nf thP famih- and iienefit luncheon and bridge of St. Seminary Auxiliary held last week at a A-'i urer, wearing a cerise and black print, black felt hat trimmed with two spike feathers; Mrs. Andrew Igoe, chairman of reception, in a green suit and a sailor hat trimmed with pink roses. go without letting him know I was having a baby, and my mother had the marriage quickly annulled. After the baby was born, my mother adopted him, sent me back to boarding school and pledged me to secrecy about the whole thing, as she feared that is as it should be.

However, both parents will subconsciously resent the new arrival if his presence makes life uncomfortable over too long a period of says that it must be in the morning or in the afternoon. Mothers will find that there is quite a lot of laundry to do, even exclusive of diapers, but how often it is done and what time it is done deoends unon Also Mrs. Ralph Coni. chairman of reser vations, a black and luggage striped taffeta llmo dna lllcU ls oeniiueiy uau. and black hat: Mrs.

Thomas Bradv.l How easily the new baby fits chairman of books, in green crepe with an off-ji" household depends, to Waldorf-Astoria, according to the attend-. a aiai the proceeds. All present were about the event, including Mrs. Ki'-rnan. founder and first president of who really ought to know.

in have a bigger and better party requires committee and the auxiliary certainly no. Mrs. James J. Carrano was general for the current president. Mrs.

Fred- Mathews. Both executives looked at-, ive. Mrs- Carrano wa- wearing a lime crepe k. with a corsage of green orchids and a i. felt bonnet, almost completely covered a -hii rcd lime-colored veiling.

Mrs. Mathews navy blue satin twa-piece frock and a her convenience. Of course, she: boys would "make passes" at will not want to leave odds and1 me if thev knew. Mary Haworth the-'ar-P hlark hat hrnv0.h0nrlp,l on iiu v.ro in mak ment: Mrs. George Prothero, chairman of cards ing plans for the (are of the in a black and rosebud print frock witlra blush sidered her ideal.

Is there anything 1 can do to win his filial love, too. or should I let the matter drop? H- Real Mother Missed Boat 20 Years Ago DEAR C. H. What is filial love but loyal gratitude, fueled by a pattern of memories and chain of experiences having to do with maternal devotion faithfully given, through thick and thin, in a child's helpless, defenseless, formative years? Such is the feeling you have for your mother, who never failed you in emergency. And such is the feeling Bill has for her too, with ample justification.

Taking this view of the situation, don't jou see that you the boat with Bill? Better Xot Prod Proud Adolescent It's not surprising, but rather natural, that BUI shrinks from accepting you as mother, and especially now: 1. Because he is almost grow and disposed to quit apronstrings in any case. 2. Because your prideful desire to parade him as your own is subtly insensitive and presumptuous, coming so soon after his "ideal" mother's death. 3.

Because the mother he loved was elderly, whereas you are young enough to be his sister and until recently were billed as such in his scheme of things; and consequently he would feel like a fool saluting you filially. For advice, it seems to me that in fairness to Bill you ought to respect his hesitancy, try to understand his reservations without questioning them, and digest your disappointment with good grace. In later years, he may be proud to hail you as mother; but for the present don't press him about it. M. H.

babv the mother should ends of soiled baby clothing: The bridegroom had vowed he would return around the house and it is wellon njs 21st birthday to marry me again: and to remember that fresh stainsjtnje tQ his wordt he (lk, come back, but I refused soak out in cool water if they whereupon he sau he would remaln are put to soak earlv. I Making baby's formula takes rest of hls llfe- and 50 he Meantime a little time but goes more I he has become a prominent doctor, and six years pink hat; Mrs. Frederick Hofmann. publicity jfceep in mind the past routine of chairman, in green crepe frock and a beige. her household.

This routine chapeau. may have to oe cnangeu or modified but it shouldn't be Also Mrs. Eugene Sarsfield, chairman of ago I married Matt, a wonderful man. and we Babies are usually quickly with practice. Some disrupted f.amingo calot with two large matching: printing, wearing a black suit with gold blause She had a corsage off white orchids.

with a gold metallic fabric turban: Mrs. Gil bert Cassidy. who arranged for seating, wearing ne prizes were fabulous, including an elector blanket, steam iron, toaster, pressure linen- and perfumes. There were 110 such ans. The special award of a basket of cheer vent to Mrs.

Edward Kalbfleisch and the gift of in cash given by Sister Mary Agnes, moderator of the auxiliary, was received by Mrs. Edward Stanley. The prizes for the 132 tables were flame-proof coffee makers are very happy together. Wants to Brag Abont 'My Son When I knew we were falling in love, I told Matt the whole story, which made no difference to him, as he was crazy about my son, whom I shall call Bill. A few months ago we lost my mother, and Matt and I see no reason to make a secret, any longer, of my true relationship to BiU, now nearly 19.

I would like to be able to confide in my friends and brag about son," too, but Bill, although he seems to like me and is crazy about Matt, doesn't seem eager to accept me as his fed on a three or four hour schedule. Even a baby on "self demand" feeding will usually put itself on one of these fairly regular bases. It should be possible to plan baby's feeding schedule so that father can still get his breakfast on time in the morning and the parents' normal sleeping time should not, as a rule, be disturbed more than once to feed the baby. Babies should not be bathed until an hour after they have had their feedings but otherwise there is no set rule which physicians tell mothers with electric refrigerators that they can make two days formula at once. Other physicians feel that formulas should be made daily.

The important thing is to have a regular time for formula making so that you won't find yourself with a hungry baby and a formula not yet ready. A little patience, a little intelligence and quite a lot of planning will make the little stranger in the house more than ever welcome and a real joy to both hij ar ai a blue and cerise print frock and black hat; Mrs. Thomas Cantrell, chairman of table prizes, in a white and blue print and attractive white hat with a plume in the front: Mrs. Frank Clarke, chairman of sweepstakes, in a black and pink print with a black net picture hat trimmed with pink flowers, and Mrs. Albert Brancaccio in a black frock with pink chapeau.

Content with the party and no doubt glad that.it was a success, Mrs. Carrano with her husband left on Sunday to spend a month at AMONG THE ASSISTING CHAIRMEN oted were: Mrs. Thomas A. Dwyer, co-chair- jaan, who was in black with a pink hat trimmed tie Marine Terrace, Miami Beach, Fla..

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
1,426,564
Years Available:
1841-1963