Savannah daily times. (Savannah, Ga.) 1936-????, June 18, 1936, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

PAGE SIX Omaha University Gives Its Students Practical Courses OMAHA. Neb., June 17.—The Mu nicipal university of Omaha has joined the ranks of 40 other colleges and universities in the United States who give students an opportunity to alternate between the campus, and workshop or office. With the co-operation of business and industrial firms it announces that a work-study curriculum will be launched with the opening of the first semester next fall. The start planned will be a mod est one compared with the University of Cincinnati with 1,600 work-study students and Antioch college with 650. Not more than 50 jobs for 100 alternating students will be available the first year, J. E. Woods, work study director, announces. He recently completed a survey of similar plans throughout the country under direction of the local board of regents and Rowland Haynes, presi dent of the university. Some funda mental changes in the curriculum are anticipated, they announce. Details are to be worked out during the sum mer. MUNITION EXPLOSION TRAPS HELPLESS MEN TALLINN, ESTONIA, June 17 (TP). —The death toll mounted steadily In the wrecked munitions plant near Tallinn today as rescue workers dug Into the burning, explod ing mass of steel and timbers. So far 59' bodies of workmen have been recovered from the wreckage. The explosion was touched off dur ing the charging of a shell. Powder and other shells roared up and trap ped the elpless workmen before they could escape. PUT YOUR BONUS MONEY IN SOMETHING SUBSTANTIAL DROP IN AND GO OVER OUR LIST OF HOME” • INVESTMENTS AND LOTS— See MENDEL RENTAL AGENCY 13 EAST YORK ST. PHONE 6171 BridesZ<7 (7 > L- Use Your Credit at Helmly’s DURING THE MONTH OF JUNE ! HELMLY FURNITURE COMPANY WILL OFFER THE PUBLIC SOME OUTSTANDING VALUES See Our Display of New Spring Furniture for the June Brides. $ j “Now on Display” PRICES ARE LOWER THAN THEY HAVE EVER BEEN IN THE HISTORY OF THE FURNITURE INDUSTRY. I. C. Helmly FURNITURE COMPANY "'OSK AND WHITAKER STREETS PINCHOT’S SON TAKES A BRIDE ■ a J ’! / Bi *VI a llim IML a 1 Mr. and Mrs. Gifford Bryce Pinchot It’s Mr. and Mrs. Gifford Byrce Pinchot now, following their marriage at Wilton, Conn. He is the son of the former gov ernor of Pennsylvania. She is the former Miss Sarah Huntington Richards of Wilton and New York. —Central Press. FORD A “DOCTOR” EAST LANSING, Mich., June 17 (TP). —Henry Ford can tack the word "doctor” before his signature in the future —if he wants to. Ford, dressed in a flowing black gown and mortar board, was given an honorary degree of doctor of engineering at the commencement exercises of Michigan State college. COMPLETELY SORRY "Now doesn't this spanking make you feel sorry?” "Yes, sorry I ever met you, sorry I married you and sorry that I can’t get rid of you. SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1936 Conscription Comes to the Philippines wk I st ~ «« W M ' L M' - - 0 BKmmSO ri JI '■ / sion. The blindfolded gl rl is drawing out the numbers of the 40.000 young men who will be called to the colors in the class of 1937. (Central Press) COUNT CALORIES TO GAIN IDEAL WEIGHT By GLADYS GLAD “Americas Most Famous Beauty’’ THERE IS. I am told, a swarthy Algerian nobleman who prefers for his meals such seemingly inedible odds and ends as nuts, bolts, screws, nalis, and for a high lunch, carpet tracks. This gentleman, however, likes his meals served hot. And so he warms up his hardware diet with a blow torch. It’s hardly a diet one would recommend to the average in dividual, and I don’t imagine that this Algerian prince overindulges or gorges himself at mealtimes. However, there are many girls who do gorge themselves at 'mealtimes. They thoughtlessly overindulge in foods that aren’t conducive to health and figure loveliness. And when they start acquiring unsightly fat, they get panicky and indulge in reducing measures that are far from wise. Take ib from me, it’s the wise baby who chooses a sensible method of re ducing. A carefully planned dieting and exercising routine, such as the one in my “New Figure” booklet, "for instance, is an ideal type. For such a routine reduces weight effectively without having any detrimental ef fects on the health. However for the woman who likes to plan her own menus, calories counting is a good method of reduc tion. I told you about counting calories to gain weight a short time ago, and the system is just as good for reducing. If a girl eats the proper foods in the proper amounts, she's bound to lose weight effectively. And with a good calorie chart, such as the one outlined in my “New Figure” booklet, she'll not find it at all dif ficult. The amount of calories required each day varies, of course, with th? individual. But there’s a system thereby the average woman can easily figure out the amount of cal ories her body needs. If she is a normally active woman, her normal intake of food daily should range from 16 to 20 calories for each pound of her normal weight. If, for in stance, her normal weight is 115 pounds, her diet, to supply the needs of her body, should have a calorie value of from 1.840 to 2,300. This variation in amounts is given to take in differences in activities. If a girl s usually actve, she should in cline toward the large number. While, if she’s usually inactive, she should incline toward the smaller one. And if she wants to reduce, she should cut down her normal intake of food by about 1,000 calories per day. This will not only check any weight in crease, but will also force the body to draw on its reserves of fat, and thus gradually bring about weight re duction. Cosmetics Marie: I think that a soft peach shade of powder, soft orange rouge, light lipstick and dark brown eye shadow cream would blend harmoni ously with your coloring. Vinegar Rinse Grace: The vinegar rinse is a soft ening rinse and helps to bring out the highlights in the hair. This rinse should be composed of half a glass of. vinegar and a pint of dear water. EDITOR'S NOTE: While it is im possible for Miss Glad to answer beauty questions by mail, she will be happy to send you her pamphlets on “The New Figure” and “eauty Cul ture” if you will write her, care of this paper, enclosing a self-addressed envelope stamped with a three-cent stamp, and ten cents in coin FOR EACH, to cover cost of printing and handling. For her articles on "Care of the Hands and Nails” and "Care of the Feet and Legs,” two cents in coin FOR EACH, and a self-address ed. stamped envelope are required. Personal uesticns on beauty will be answered through Miss Glad’s daily column. BRIGHT THOUGHT First Native Charmer —“That ship wrecked sailor says that the buoy in our harbor was the only thing that saved him from drowning.” Second Native Charmer—“ Hooray! Another local buoy makes good.” Edwina Wins Over Fever -■■ ;; 4 / 1 "4 I Sdwina Booth (right), the vivacious picture star who won success as he white goddess in "Trader Horn” in 1929 only to find her health shat ,ered by the harsh African sun, is definitely on the mend and has been able to walk. She is shown with Dr. Edward S. Cowie, in New York. (Central Press) GOOD BRUSH KEEPS HANDS LILY WHITE “QUEEN BESS’’ BATHED HERS IN WINE TO KEEP THEM SMOOTH AND VELVETY. By GLADYS GLAD "America's Most Famous Beauty” THE FIERY-TEMPERED, fiery, haired Queen Elizabeth of England, it is said, always washed her hands in a silver bowl of wine. Elizabeth had very expressive and powerful hands, yet they had the soft, white delicacy of femininity. And the fre quent wine cleaneings she gave them undoubtedly had a great deal to do with their fairness and velvety tex ture. However, wine is not necessary for keeping the hands smooth and white. Soap and water constitute the best hand beautifiers in the world. But a hand brush helps, too, for a good hand brush, when used in conjunstion with warm, soft, water, and a pure, bland soap, removes all dirt, grime and discolorations from th? hands, and also tends to keep them soft and smooth-textured. Brush Shaped Like Turtle In days of old, the turtle was con sidered an omen of good luck by sea faring men. And utilizing this thought a new “lucky turtle” hand brush has recently been placed on the market. ■This brush certainly should bring good luck to hands and nails, if prop erly used. For it has advantages that many ordinary hand brushes do not possess. In the first place, it encour ages youngsters to keep their paddies well-ecrubbed because of its cute tur tle back, which is the replica of a live turtle, and is curved like a turtle’s back, so that it fits snugly into the palm of the hand. The firm, resilient bristles are compactly sealed in the COMRADES Comrades Then, Comrades Now—We Invite You If You Are Interested in a Real Used Car Value of Any Make, Style or Model, See an Old Ruddy, STEVE KUTCHEY and His Associates 50 Fords, Chevrolets, Plymouths, Dodges, Buicks, etc., for your selection. Compare our prices. 1935 Chevrolet Four-Door Sedan, 13,000 Miles 5495. Kutchey Motors Jones and Barnard Streets back so they will cleanse thoroughly without splattering, and are. unatfect ed by wear and tear. For like the turtle, they are hardy and lotig lived. The best feature of this lucky tur tle brush is its pointed tail. Most women, after scrubbing their hands, don’t think of cleaning their nails as well. But the pointed tail on the lucky turtle back of the brush is de signed for just this purpose. No wo man can possibly forget to give her nailtips a cleansing with this brush in her hands. The best way to use it is to scrub the hands with it, using warm, soapy water. After the scrub bing, embed your nailtips in a cake of soap. Then, with the tail the brush, work the soap in and out, 1 and finally cleanse them well with the tail. This will not only leave your hands clean, smooth and white, but will also leave the nailtips that snowy- ! white hue so essential to true hand loveliness. There are many other good brushes on the market, of course, so is no excuse for not keeping the paddies immaculate and attractive. f MENU HINTS i By MRS. MARY MORTON Scrambled Eggs and Bacon Baked or Creamed Potatoes Lettuce and Raw Spinach Salad Burnt Sugar Cake Tea This is a dinner or supper menu, not a breakfast. I like to serve eggs in this form or in an omelet for an evening or noon meal. The cake re cipe was submitted in a contest and should be filed for reference when you want an especially nice cake to se/ve to family or guests. Today’s Recipes Burnt Sugar Cake—One cup sugar, one-half cup butter or margarine, two eggs, separated; one cup cold water, two cups flour, two teaspoons baking powder, one-half teaspoon salt, one teaspoon lemon extract, two-thirds cup sugar, one-half cup boiling water. Cream the butter and sugar thorough ly. Add the well-beaten egg yolks, and then the beaten whites. Add the flour and water alternately. In a hot, dry skillet put the two-thirds cup sugar and stir constantly until it melts and turns dark brown. Add the boiling water and stir and boil until it spins a thread. Add this syrup to the bat ter and beat for five minutes. Then add extract and baking powder. Bake Where Else Can As Much Be Had For So Little Money? f - • As in INDUSTRIAL CITY GARDENS, “The Salaried Man’s Paradise,” where you may ac quire not a city lot but a little country estate of ♦ one to twenty acres, or more, of fertile, well drained land, on which we will build, and sell to you on terms like rent, a lovely frame or brick bungalow, with modern bath, running water, electric lights, telephone and street car facilities. On this property, you may not only enjoy city conveniences but all ccfiintry advantages, in that you may have a profusion of flowers, an abun dance of vegetables, fruits, poultry, a pony for your boy, your shooting dogs, etc., with the city only five minutes away. Go out and see for yourself that it is not only a pleasant place to live, but a safe, sound and profitable place in which to invest, as the three hundred odd happy, thrifty, prosperous resi- ’ dents in INDUSTRIAL CITY GARDENS will testify. Also, in SILK HOPE FARMS (shortly to b® offered to the public), you may acquire, on or off the concrete, one to one hundred acres of as fine land as is to be found in the entire countryj yet, only three miles from the city limits of Sa-» vanah, on terms as low as $5.00 cash and $5.00 per tract per month, with NO interest, NO taxes, and your life insured for the first three years. When you will have paid in as much as S3OO, we will either build for you or lend you the money with which to build a lovely frame or brick bun galow, with city conveniences, where all the joys of country life and pleasures of home ownership may be had, and where you may have the satis faction of knowing that you can make a good living at home on your own land should you ever quit or lose your job. W hen you will have acquired and paid for such a lovely place, you may justly swell up with pride in that you invested your savings and ths money you were paying for rent in such a placa instead of squandering it L. H. Smith & Co. 10 DRAYTON ST. PHONE 7833 in layers in moderate oven. Ice with sevn minute icing made with brown sugar. FACTS AND FANCIES Berry Jam To one quart (three cups) any kind of berries add three cups of sugar one at a time, boiling three minutes after adding each cup, thus making equal parts fruit and sugar. The whole process takes about twelve min utes. Cool slightly and pour into ster ilized glasses. This amount will make five tumblers of jam. A grand recipe —and so quick when a little fruit is on hand to care for. FIFTEEN CENTS, MAYBE? "Ah, you b?autiful creature! Td give a thousand dollars for one of your sweet kisses.” “Really? And what would you give for one that wasn’t so sweet?”