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Friday, January 8, 1954
T M € SOU THERN » S R A 6 U T «
Poge Fiw
FOODS TO REMEMBER
Have you ever tried wrapping
one-inch cuts of Frankfurters in
atrips of pie pastry dough and
baking them just before serving
time? Yummy! A toothpick in each
facilitates handling, too.
Another slick trick is to wrap
thinly sliced boiled tongue around
•livers of dill pickle, holding the
tidbits together with toothpicks.
Cheesecake
( With sour cream poured over)
Crust:
1 cup fine crumbs of Zwieback
or cookies
Vs pound butter, melted in pan
Blend the crumbs into the melt
ed butter with a fork. Press this
mixture firmly over bottom and
•ides of a spring form cake pan.
Make the cheese filling as follows:
Cheese Filling:
1pounds cream cheese
1 cup sugar
4 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla
Combine cheese and sugar in a
mixing bowl and add one egg at a
time, beating well after each addi
tion. Work in the flavoring and
turn the mixture into the crumb
lined pan. Bake 55 minutes at 350
deg. F. or till firm in the center.
Turn off heat and let cake cool in
the oven, with oven door open, ap
proximately 45 minutes to 1 hour.
Pre-heat the oven to 425 deg. F.
Remove cake in the pan while
oven is being reheated and pour
over it the following topping:
Topping:
1 pint sour cream
2 tablespoons sugar
Vi teaspoon vanilla
Return the cake with topping to
the pre-heated oven (425 deg. F.)
and bake 5 minutes, no longer.
The sour cream topping congeals
when the cake cools.
Note: This recipe is quite dif
ferent from the usual ones but
makes a most delicious cheese
cake.
WE TOP
'EM ALL
"45 YEARS' BUSINESS INTEGRITY"
CHAS. N. WALKER
ROOFING CO.
WAInut 5747
741 Houttoa St., N. L, Atlanta, Go
s i ia4:i i !:i.3Z33nnui i(iirsia
One Stop Servicej
1 Hour Cleaning
A Specialty
Hazan’s Tailors
& Cleaners
1668 Peachtree, N.E.
At Tenth EL. 0616
LADIES AND MEN’S
HATS
tajtjiTLjaassrr crrnmrj
Allen Ham Eidson
AND
William B. Eidson
Announce formation of part
nership for the general prac
tice of accountancy and re
lated tax matters under the
firm name of
Ham Eidson & Co.
823-826 Forsyth Building
Atlanta 3, Georgia
Certified Public
Accountants
JANUARY 1, 1954
WA. 5799
A.Z.A. 134 Has
Busy Month
¥
A busy month has been .chalked
up for AZA Chapter, No. 134, in
Atlanta.
At a joint cultural and social af
fair, members collected canned
goods for a charitable purpose.
Four cases of the cans were later
taken on the day before Thanks
giving to the Carrie Stills Pitts
Home for underpriviledged Ne
gro children.
The group has concluded its
I inter-chapter oratory contest. D.
Geffen, B. Goldstein and H. Bur-
ham were the contestants. Leon
Eplan, Dick Forman and Joe Bef-
koff were judges. Dave Geffen
was selected winner to represent
134 at the forthcoming AZA Re
gional Convention at Augusta on
December 28-29-30.
Members have also presented a
check for $50 to Jack Chilnick,
Barney Medintz and A. L. Feld
man for the Atlanta Jewish Com
munity Center Building Fund.
—CHARLES FIRESTONE
Chapter Reporter.
Israeli Gift to U. N,
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.,
(JTA)—Stone cut from the hills of
Jerusalem, a gift from Israel, is
being laid to form a base for a
peace bell and a small pagoda,
gifts from Japan, in a small open
area just north of the U. N. Sec
retariat building. Israel sent 800
slabs of the stone.
Robinson Bar Mtizvah
Stephen Robinson, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Gus Robinson of Atlanta,
celebrated his Bar Mitzvah on
January 2 at the Ahavath Achim
jSynagogue.
FOR BETTER HEARING
Beltone Quintuplets
Yes, identical in appearance but FIVE (5)
different all-transistor hearing aids to com
pensate for mild to very severe hearing loss.
In all 264 different fitting combinations.
Beltone
OF ATLANTA
Rubein V. Johnson
CERTIFIED HEARING AID AUDIOLOGIST
78 BROAD ST„ N. W. CY. 2464
At Home In Israel
With ANITA ENGLE
I should imagine that my son,
David, was the only person in
Isi'ael wearing a bathing suit dur
ing our Cold Spell. He wore it
under his clothes, of course, and
was so proud ol
it, he kept pull
ing his pants
down at kinder
garten, to show
off.
“There’s n o
b o o s h a h
(shame) in
that, is there?
People show them off
beach.”
The bathing costume is an all-
the
Agricultural Body
To Survey Florida
Settlement Outlook
NEW YORK (JTA) — The
Jewish Agricultural Society an
nounced this week that it will
undertake a survey of opportuni
ties for Jewish farm settlement in
the state of Florida and if con
ditions warrant will open a branch
office there.
The society noted several favor
able factors, especially with re
spect to marketing and indicated
that a new field might be opened
for Jewish settlers in a state where
the Jewish population is on the
increase.
New Jewish farmers have been
established recently in poultry
farming and other branches of
agriculture in the East and in Cali
fornia, the society reported. More
than half of these new farmers
are DP’s and recent immigrants.
The Florida survey of settlement
prospects will be conducted • by
Herman J. Levine.
wool handmade monstrosity pre
sented by Grandma-in-England, to
Jonathan when he was three years
old. It couldn’t be worn in an Is
raeli summer, and I could never
bring myself to throw it away be
cause the wool was so good. When
the first onslaught of winter took
us by surprise—it always takes
us by surprise here—I had to in
dulge in some pretty strategy be
fore the boys were fitted to face
the bitter cold and driving rain.
They had to stay home the first
two days because they didn’t have
any rubber boots. Why? Because,
like myself, very few people would
think of preparing for winter
while the sun is still blazing down.
It isn’t only negligence. It’s be
cause there’s so little spare cash
about, there never seems enough
to buy what is actually necessary
at the moment. For about a week,
every mother in the country found
rubber boots a necessity, and
whether we could afford the It 7
or not (If 14 for two pairs), we
laid hands on it somehow, and
dashed off to the shoe shop be
tween downpours. Well, rubber
boots simply weren’t available.
The factories couldn’t produce
enough to meet the sudden de
mand, and if they* don’t hurry up
and produce them within the next
couple of weeks, it’ll just be too
late. Anyway, the sun is shin
ing down again, and I won’t re
member to be . annoyed until the
rainy weather sets in once more.
SHALOM V’ L’HITRAOT.
Thick... Rich.:.
“ Satisfying...
and so deliciously smooth!
Ms* Try
MiniscMwiU
lulu Ssup.
Maniscluwitt
Chicken
$Nft
KIJMI
MM
L'sf !
SgBL
v E
When Other Efforts to Reduce
Weight Are Disappointing, Try
roman Meal Bread
A Betsy Ross Product
For tfo*
SAVINGS
YOUR LIFE...
Wa offer investment certificates in multiple* of $100.00 on which
the dividends are mailed to you each June 30th and December Slat.
We offer regular savings accounts that can b*dn any amount. Divh
derids are added June 30th and December 31st.
Either type is insured up to $10,000.00 by the Federal Savings and
l oan Insurance Corporation.
1 he dividend has never been less than at 3 per cent per annum.
^ e have never required any notice of redemption.
They are legal for trust funds.
They are accepted by the Stale of Georgia as legal deposit far ftfr»
aurance companies.
All transactions can he handfed by mail.
All investments received by January 11th earn from the 1st,
DeKalb County Federal Savings & Loan Ass’i
Shepard Bryan, Chairman of Board Bonneau A rule y, President
C. Payne McMurry, Ereeudre Vice President
ISl E. Ponce de L*on At#., 1246 Glen wood Ave., K*
Decatur, Ca. Atlanta, Ga.