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The Akron Beacon Journal from Akron, Ohio • Page 16
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The Akron Beacon Journal from Akron, Ohio • Page 16

Location:
Akron, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
16
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Fricliy. June t. 1951 I ALron Hearon Journal French Cream Pudding Winner Ruled Best In Dmfs Favorite Dessert Contest ABOUT PEOPLE YOU K(W' It's A Long. Happy Day For Old Trail Seniors 1 9-inch unbaked pie rust 1 egg, beaten lightly 1 cups light cream 1 teaspoon butter or Place in refrigerator and chill for 24 houn. Makes 8 servings.

THE THREE generation cream pie favorite nuist be baked carefully, not too long or too hot. Grandma he Seur's Cream Pie 1 nip light hroun sugar I1 2 tablespoons flour By BK I -v-rv a tit i -iff 1 Atfofttfr'w THIS IS A MIGHTY BIG DAY for numbers of the senior at Old Trail and a mighty long onp the agenda they have arranged for themselves makes me tired to even look at it but I suppose time was when I could miss a night's sleep without ending up like worn out dish rag. The girls marched down the aisle in a transformed Quonset hut this morning to receive their diplomas. Three mother of members of the Junior class slaved and connived with yards and yards of crepe paper to make the hut into a thing of beauty instead of the gym that it really is. their efforts were rewarded for the place did look lovely.

Late this afternoon the seniors with their escorts will meet at the home of Barbara Bear on Merriman for a coketail party to precede the dinner party which Nancy Anderson and Beverly Wattleworth are giving at the Anderson home in Hudson. The girls and their beaux will be back in Akron at the Portage Country Club by 9 for the Senior Prom which is to last until 1 o'clock. AFTER THE BALL IS OVER, the seniors and escorts will go to the home of Ann Huntington in Fairlawn for a bite of supper and then wall take to a hay wagon for a ride through the dawn this event seems to have become a tradition and will finally arrive at Portage CC for breakfast and an curly morning swim. Incidentally they will be the first (n enter the Portage pool this year the pool will be open Saturday for the first time. Sally Shively and Mae Little are the hostesses for the hay ride and Sally Church and Jean Corcoran for the breakfast.

Parties For Undergraduates, Too THE MEMBERS OF THE junior class at Old Trail have been invited, along with their escorts, to come to the home of Mary Sua Calvin for coketails before the prom. Mary Sue and Nancy Grubb are hostesses for this party. Kthel Seiberling you probably call her Precie and the Huntington twins, Mary and Marjorie, will entertain the sophomore class and their dates at the Seiberling home on May-field before the prom. They hae invited their guests for coke-tails. The freshman class and their boy friends have been invited to the home of their class president, Ann Rowley, for a glass of punch before the dance.

V-r? If' 1 I ai.p.krt IIIIIN KS. (iKOIMiK A HQS FA MOOS mrs. oru.isov Bv RV MARGARET JONES Mrs. Aden K. Cullison.

421 Louisa was a guest at a party South Bend. a vear or go when the hostess served a French Cream Pudding for dessert. The pudding was so delicious. and created such a hit with the guests that Mr. Cullison obtained the recipe and brought it to Akron.

Many times she had served the dessert, alwavs getting an encore. It is the recipe for this that wins here the S-i top prize in me Beacon Journal's weekly contest for Dad's Favorite Dessert. Grandma I.eeur'8 Cream Pie capture the wrnnil prize. Mrs. John Breyer, Tit Kdgewnnd av.

submitted the recipe and ivs. "It's easily my husband's favorite dessert and has been in his family for three general ions." Another pie lecipe from Mrs. Ivy Triplett, 2163 Fourth St. carries off the third prize. It's a Marsh-mallow Pineapple Pie that's simple and easy to make.

A FLUFFY filling over crushed vanilla wafers and topped with pineapple, maraschino cherries, nuts and whipped cream pleases most Dads. Mrs. Cullison adds, "It's sure fit for any king." French Cream Pudding imiiiu tiiuiiiii waters cup soft butter or margarine cup powdered sugar I i hole eggs 1, cup maraschino cherries Jt cup crushed pineapple 1 cup chopped nuts pint whipping cream Cut and drain maraschino cherries. Drain pineapple. Line 8 by 8-inch pan or baking dish with waxed paper, letting paper extend over all the edges.

Roll vanilla wafers fine and cover bottom of pan with one-half of the crumbs. Cream shortening and powdered sugar. Add eggs, one at a time and beat with rotary beater or electric mixer until fluffy. Spread over crumbs. Whip the cream and combine with the cherries, pineapple and nut meats.

Spread over the crumb and filling layers and cover with remaining crumbs. Next! June is National Dairy Month so help celebrate it by entering your milk or cream rich recipes in the Beacon Journal's 17th weekly recipe contest. The deadline is midnight, Friday, June 15. Send your entries to Mary Margaret Jones, Food Editor. Any type of recipe, from soups to dessert is eligible so long as milk or cream is an essential element.

Girl Scouts' Camp Open To Visitors Camp Ledgewood of Akron Girl Scouts will be open to visitors from 3 to 6 p. m. Sunday. The camp is located near Peninsula. Many units will be open for in spection.

Sports, arts and crafts are to be active during visiting hours. Senior Scouts will be guides Dedication of the new troop cabin, located near Seiberling lodge, will take place at 5:30 p. Mrs. N. Vance McDowell is "open house chairman for the camp.

margarine Nutmeg Mix sugar and flour thoroughly. Put mixture in unbaked crust, being sure to cover the bottom completely. Combine egg and cream and pour over the sugar-flour mixture. Mrs. Breyer then suggests run ning the back ot a spoon arounu the cream filling twice, Jsprinme top with flour, dot with butter or margarine and then sprinkle ligni-ly with nutmeg.

Bake at 325 degrees F. about 45 to 50 minutes, or until set ana firm. Graham crackers, butter or margarine, pineapple juice, cream and marshmallows are the only ingre dients necessary for this special pie which won a prize for Mrs. Triplett. Marshmalloic Pineapple Pie 1 1 cup pineapple juice i 2 pint whipping cream i pound niarshmallows graham era kers 4 cup butter or margarine Roll crackers into crumbs snd mix with softened butter 0 margarine.

Line 9-inch pie plate. Meanwhile put 'ice i marsh-mallows in top of double boiler and when well blended, cool. Whip cream until stiff and fold into marshmallow-juice mixture. Pour into graham cracker shell and set in refrigerator until ready to serve. most daily to ask about lifting tulip bulbs after blooming.

This can be done if you are careful not to break stems. Bulbs then should be set in a trench where they will ripen. After foliage has died down Duids may be lifted, dried in a cool place and replanted in the garden in October or early No vember. The danger in moving bulbs before foliage dies is in breaking stems and also in getting colors mixed up. As the foliage dies naturally the bulb Is ripened and bloom formed for next year.

It is much easier to plant them 6 or 8 inches deep and leave them in the same spot. Deep planting prevents "break up" of bulbs into small non-blooming size. Thus they renew them selves and flower for years. The gardener must learn to have patience with the dying bulbs, Plant poppies among them to hide them or plant tulips in clusters hack of peonies, iris or shasta daisies which will take over tha show in their turn. ON WEST HILL IT SHARP'S HARDWARE Complete Line of Sherwin-Williams Paints! ill Mtrkrt Hi(hlan4 SauaM 4 WWW WW WW WW WW WW Marv Sciberliiie Weds THEX YOU'LL HAVE STEADY BLOOM Keep Pansies, Violas Cut his classmates, Raul and Miguel Panama City, Panama, will be Senior Board Meets Tucsda Senior Board of Kate Waller Barrett Training School for Girls will meet for luncheon at 11:30 a.

m. Tuesday in Akron City Club. Mrs. Clara Sparr will preside. This is the last meeting until September.

TED AND AUDREY DAVIS have Major and Mrs. Lewis Treleaven visiting at their home. The Treleavens will be here for the next two weeks. In their honor the Davises are having Open House on Saturday. The affair will be given at their home on Greenwood from 8 until 11 o'clock in the evening.

JANET HOGUE, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Warren Hogue, planned to arrive home from Skidmore College today. Saturday one of her classmates from the Saratoga Springs, N. school will come from her home in New Rochelle, N.

Y. She is Eva Brunner and she will be here for an indefinite stay. Visitors From Panama City MR. AND MRS. JOHN HOWER drove over to Indiana earlier this week to bring their son, Otis, home from Culver Military AT CAPE COD daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. John was married Thursday afternoon the chapel of St. Bartholomew's Rev. Anson Phelps Stokes Jr. C.

H. Browns To Mark 40th Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. C. H.

Brown, 1362 Getz will celebrate their 40th wedding anniversary Sunday with open house from 2 to 5 p. m. Their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. L.

D. Winsper and their two children will come from North Ridgeville, for the event. The Browns were married in Oakland, June 1, 1911, and came to Akron shortly after their marriage. They are members of Firestone Park. Methodist Church.

An avid fisherman and hunter, Mr. Brown Is retired from Firestone Tire Rubber Co. Chemical Unit To Have Dance Akron Society. American Chemi' cal Society is giving a dinner and dance Saturday evening at Univer sity Club. The dinner program, with presentation of new officers, will start at seven.

There will be dancing from nine until midnight W. G. Mayes is chairman for the event. By KATE LAPP IF YOU WANT to keep your pansies and violas blooming for weeks on end keep blossoms cut faithfully. And that is not all.

When you snip the flowers cut part of the little plant to the base. Thus frequent clipping, a little at a time will keep the plant growing and producing new stems and con sequently new Kate Clapp blooms. This renewal will necessitate feeding regularly every three weeks during the season. When pansies are neglected they soon grow weak and leggy and the plant has no strength to send out blooms. Pansies planted in June will be strong by Fall, give some blossoms then and Winter over with a light covering of leaves or straw and he ready for the next spring flowering.

When planted in August or September they still should he strong enough to Winter over. Mine blooming now were planted last September. Include pansies in your planting plan. GARDENERS write snd call al Academy. They brought two of Brostella home with them.

the hoys, whose home is in Mary Gertrude Seiberling, Frederick Seiberling of Akron, to George Albert Huhn in Church in New York City. The performed the ceremony. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Elovius Mangor of New York and Washington, D. and the late George Albei Huhn.

The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore an ivory satin gown with full train and fitted bodice trimmed with antique lace. Her long veil of Lierre lace was fastened to an orange-blossom decorated headdress. She carried a spray of white orchids ana Hues of the valley. Her only attendant was her sis ter Dorothy who wore a gown of shell pink, white dotted organdy. She carried pink roses and blue delphinium.

ELOVIUS MANGOR, first secretary of the Royal Norwegian Embassy in Washington, was best man for his stepson. Ushers were John F. Seiberling tbp hnde's brother; John Ha verstiek, Roswell Ham and Vincent Can by. The reception was given in the House of the Society of Colonial Dames. The bride, granddaughter of F.

A. Seiberling and the late Mrs. Seiberling, and the late Judge and Mrs. J. Augustus Buckler of El Paso, Texas, was graduated from Vassar and taught at Garrison Forest School in Maryland.

This last Winter she was with Handy Associates in New York. Mr. Huhn, was graduated from Choate School and Yale University. He is a World War II veteran and is associated with Sears Roebuck Co. After a wedding trip to Cape Cod, the couple will live in Chicago.

Poach leftover egg yolks (when you're using the whites for meringue or angel-food), cool and rub through a small coarse strainer as a garnish for a vegetable salad. guests at the Hower home in Fairlawn until June 26. Pre-Suptial Shower JANET JENKINS WHO becomes the bride of George Horn-ish Saturday morning at St. Sebastian Church was honored Thursday evening with a shower given by Sally Smith at her MRS. LITZ White gladioli, chrysanthemums and palms and fernt decorated the Church of Our Saviour altar for the wedding of Marjorie Lucille Davis and Wilford Irwin Lutz Jr.

The Rev G. Carlan Elliott of Christ Methodist Church offi-ciated at the double ring cere-mony which took place on the 28th anniversary of the hride'i parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph C. Davis, 5oS Palisades dr.

The bride wore a white slipper satin gown and a lace Juliet cap held her fingertip veil. Sim carried a white Bible topped with white orchids and stephan-otis. Mrs. Robert Grotz, the matron of honor, wore shrimp net. The bridesmaids, Virginia Nixon, Jean Hathaway, Joan McKee and Mary Lutz, the bridegroom's sister, chose Nile green.

All of the bride's attendant carried white lace and satin fans to which were attached shrimp-hued carnation corsages. Walter Howiler was best man for the bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilford I. Lutz, 735 Glendora av.

Robert Grotz, the i e's cousin, William Turner, Dale Swain and Don Rowan ushered. After a reception in the church parlors, the couple left on a motor trip to Chicago. The bride is an alumna of West High and attended Akron where she became an Eta Gamma. Her husband was graduated from Buchtel High and ii with the Citizens Saving Loan Co. SEE "DOC" MEEKER For The 1 BEST TV or APPLIANCE DEAL in AKRON! 1 nn.f.

xot be vxDEnsoLn: 6 WEST MARKET ST. JE-Sin Open P. M. for AKRON Brides! Graceful Silver Plated Bread Tray $20 F. T.

I. Very Handsome and Nicely Made Sterling Dessert Size Sugar and Cream K. T. Just Right for Hot Sauces, Gravy and Many Other Uses Sterling Pipkin and Tray $2nBS r. t.

1. Handsome Hurricane Lamps In Lord Saybrook Pattern of Sterling Bases can be used as Console Candlesticks Pair Q0 F. T. I. Gracious living with a lovely Sterling and China Sandwich Plate $3 50 F.

T. Sterling Console Candlesticks In a variety of patterns from $6.00 F.T.I, for the pair. Illustrated: .50 F. T. home on Marvin av.

Ann Werner recently gave a dinner in Janet's honor at the University Club. A wedding breakfast for the families and bridal party will be served at Fairlawn Country Club and a reception at the Jenkins home on W. Exchange will follow. IRNBAUM'S 147 S. Main at Bowery Entrance Just Around The Corner Puritan Style Sterling Silver Gravy Boat Sim-plicity in its lines Functional in use 1.

1. Reproduction of Jack Sheppard Styling This lovely Sterling Salt and Pepper Set will be well received I. Gift Exchange For LCBA Unit LCBA, Branch 1475, will mret at 8 p. m. Monday in visual education room nf St.

Joseph School in Cuyahoga Falls. There will be a white elephant gift exchange during the social part of the meeting and refreshments. MISS MIOEMAKKK Janice Elaine Shoemaker and Kenneth Kaher will be married at 5:30 p. m. Sunday In an open chuich ceremony in Hartville's Christ Evangelical and Reformed Church.

The bride-elect, daughter of Mr. pnd Mrs. Dwight Shoemaker, Hattville, is an alumna of Iake Township High. Her fiance, mm of Forris Fa-her. I'niontown, was graduated from Uniontown Ideh and works at the Schoner Garage, in Hart-ville.

BOOKKEEPER WANTED With accounting or auditing experience. Must lie thorough and able to take full charge of office detail In downtown retail establishment. work In pleasant surroundings, salary well above average, decoding on ability. If you're looking for a change for the better, answer this ad at once. Only steady, reliable man or woman will he considered.

fun details. All replies confidential. Writ Box Beacon Journal SALE WHITE sradn HATS! f'1 ma nine values up la 0.00.' a Glamorous white hat fashions at marvelous savings right at the beginning1 of the season! White straws white piques white laces! Feminine trims every new shape! Sleevelessness is fashion news lU Redbook, Mademoiselle, Glamour heap unprecedented editorial praise on thii wonderful casual dress by Lampl. Bare your arms to the beauty of its simple lines, accented by multiple tucks running down the front separated by the row of buttons. Superbly tailored of washable, lightweight rayon junior butcher linen with 0 twice-the-price air.

In pretty pastel and glorious dark-tones. Sizes 10 to 13 1: 1: 11 1: i 'I, -K-f Smiiir in.iijj Atnerlria 0ia SMlrtr 204 S. MAIN ST, 1.

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Pages Available:
3,081,243
Years Available:
1872-2024