Spring Appetites Crave Sweets
BY GAYNO MADDOX
* NEA Staff Writer
Youngsters and oldsters, too, en
joy and thrive on wholesome sweets
when spring puts a fresh zest in
the appetite. Here’s a delicious
pudding that uses stale bread and
brown sugar and spring eggs.
Chocolate Bread Pudding
, (Serves 6)
Two squares unsweetened choc
olate, 3 cups milk, 1-4 teaspoon salt
1-2 cup light brown sugar, firmly
. packed, 2 egg yolks, slightly beaten,
1 1-2 teaspoons vanilla, 6 slices
stale bread, cut in 1-2-inch cubes.
For the meringue; 2 egg whites, 4
tablespoons sugar.
Add chocolate to milk and heat
in double boiler. When chocolate
is melted, beat with rotary egg
beater until blended. Add salt.
j Combine brown sugar and egg
yolks; add chocolate mixture grad
1 ually, stirring vigorously. Add va
nilla. Combine bread and chocol
ate mixture and let stand 10 to 15
minutes, stirring occasionally.
Turn into greased baking dish,
place in pan of hot water, and
bake in moderate oven (350 degrees
, F.) 30 minutes, or until almost
set. Beat egg whites until loamy
throughout; add sugar, 2 table -
speons at a time, beating after
each addition until sugar is blend
ed. Then continue beating until
mixture will stand in peaks. Pile
meringue lightly in mounds to
fonn a border around edge of pud
> ding. Sprinkle meringue with
shaved chocolate and continue bak
ing 8 minutes longer, or until me
ringue is delicately browned. Serve
(warm or cold. May also be baked
in individual dishes.
Komatne Wit- An Herb Sauce
(Serves 4)
One large head romaine, 1-4 tea
spoon dry mustard, 1-2 teaspoon
salt, 1 cup boiling water, 2 table
spoons butter or fortified marga
rine, 1 bouillon cubes.
Wash the romaine well. Cut the
white stems separate from the
leaves. Cut leaves in several piec
es. Add remaining Ingredients and
simmer covered, until tender and
water is absorbed. Serve with a
topping of mayonnaise to which a
little chili sauce has been added.
Or serve with a cheese cream
sauce.
TOMOROWS MENU
BREAKFAST: Ready - to -
eat wholewheat cereal with
sliced bananas, honey buns,
coffee, milk.
LUNCHEON: Tomato juice,
creamed hard-cooked eggs, ro
maine salad, seeded rolls, but
ter or fortified margarine,
stewed rhubarb, tea, milk.
DINNER: Codfish cakes,
spiced tomato sauce, baked
beans, Boston brown bread,
butter or fortified margarine,
cole slaw garnished with fresh
watercress, chocolate bread
pudding, coffee, milk.
POLl’S
Starting today at the Loew-Poll
theatre and playing for a full week
is the great show “Between Two
Women" and “The Great Flamar
ion.’’
Starring Van Johnson, Gloria De
Haven, Marilyn Maxwell, and feat
uring Lionel Barrymore, Keenan
Wynn, and Keye Luke, “Between
Two Women” is another in the
ever popular Dr. Gillespie series
and marks the first starring role
for Van Johnson.
Comedy and drama are deftly
blended to make it one of the most
solidly entertaining pictures to be
seen in a long time. As Dr. Ran
dall (Red) Adams, Van Johnson,
• McKENNEY
ON BRIDGE
BT WILLIAM K.
Awrfca'i CM
(TMi to ttw Brat «r
U)
The Warren slam convention,
developed by s (roup of players
at Warren, Pa., Including Dr Rob
ert Israel and Mrs. Albert Rock
well, can be learned easily. Things
to remember are:
1. An ace counts two points and
a king one.
2. The convention Is initiated
with the bid lor lour no trump. In
order to make this bid, two aces
or an ace and a void suit must be
held.
3. A response ol five clubs shows
one point or less; live diamonds, :
two points; five hearts, three points;
live spades, lour points and live no
trump, live points.
4A32
49Q
♦ AK j
♦ AQ86542 J 1
A J 8 6 4 |
49 J 107 52 j
♦ 9 7 4 3
A None
AK107 1
49 AKt
♦ J 10862 i
*K7
South West North" East
1 ♦ Pass 3 * Pass 1
3 N. T. Pass 4 N. T. Pass 1
5N.T Pass 7N.T. Pass 1
Opening—49 3. 5 1
AQ95
49 9843
♦ QS
4 J 10 9 3
After South resonded live no
trump, showing live points, it was
not hard lor North to bid seven.
II the club suit tailed to break (as
it did), the diamonds could be tried
and the contract made.
BEAUTIES’ HINTS
Lighten Hair
By Easy Stages
BT ALICIA HART
NEA Stall Writer
Bleaching hair to revive youth
ful brightness at the expense of a
sallow or aging skin is a mistake
many women make. Only a fresh
skinned, unlined lace can stand the
eye-baiting contrast ol hair that's
made corn silk-yellow or platinum
pale.
To rekindle lost "gold” In blonde
hair that goes dark, settle for
modest stakes—color lifted only one
shade. Properly, color-lilting should
be done by an expert with progres
sive rinses or a dye job. Lacking j
professional services, try brighten- |
ing—not color-lifting—in your basin
with shampoos or rinses that tem
porarily revive blondness but at no
risk of crowning you with a glory
that looks unnatural and makes
skin suffer from the contrast.
takes a well earned respite from
his duties one evening and visits a
night club for relaxation. Imme
diately, however, he is catapulted
into a strange case when one of
the singers, seemingly completely
healthy, collapses in her dressing
room after her performance.
On the same program "The Great
Flamarion” stars Erich Von Stro- ,
helm and Mary Beth Hughes. .
CERTIFIED
COLD STORAGE
FOR FURS
WITH 100% INSURANCE
i
Our vaults are examined and certified by the American Insti- J
tute of Refrigeration — the most efficient and widely recog- |
nized system for the proper protection of your furs. a
*
*
*
No more worry about,
fire, theft, moths. (N. /
B. Carbon Dioxide fire\
extinguisher system!
as used by the U. S. \
Navy.) i
NOW
is toe time to entrust your
valued furs to experienced,
dependable experts. 30
years fur service to the
Waterbury public is your
guarantee of satisfaction.
*
*
*
New Process
Cleansing
Before you store your furs
let us give them a thorough
cleansing by the new proc
ess system — The sawdust
system — the newest, saf
est, most efficient method
known to the fur trade.
We are completely
equipped with this system
right on the premises un
der the personal super
vision of Mr. Rosenzwjeg.
ENTRUST YOUR FURS
TO ONE WHO KNOWS
ROSENZWEHrS
148 North Main St. T#l. 3*7096
SERVING YOU FOR 30 YEARS
I ft Af liWt
BY EPSIE KINARD
NEA Staff Writer
Using your good silver won’
rurt It — Instead will brighter
ovely finish — but lack of ca-(
vlU make It look like neglectec
intiques.
Experts aware that scratches
ome from mixing flatware anc
osslng It Into the dishpan, an
inxlous to help you reform, if yoi
idmit to this and other carelec
mbits.
To wash, they tell you to or
;anize knives, forks, spoons, ant
ervlng pieces In groups, anc
:lean separately In hot soap:
rater. Rinse in hot water anc
Iry with a soft clean towel. 11
ood stains tarnish pieces, clear
rith silver polish before stainr
nove in to stay.
When sliver is ornamented, yoi
:an penetrate crevices by apply
ng polish with a stiff brush or
ingraved areas; a cloth when
ireas are smooth and are apt tc
•e scratched. If oxidised effect
FIGURE-MOLDING
DUB
LENGTH
WISE
Smoothly fitting with an imclut
ered look—that’s the way wou want
m afternoon frock to be .This one
Ills the bill!
Pattern No. 8787 is designed foi
izes 14, 18, 18, 20; 40 and 42. Size
6 dropped shoulder, 3 1-2 yards
f 39-inch matehrlal; three quar
er sleeve, 3 7-8 yards.
For this pattern, send 20 cents, in
JOINS, your name, address, size
lesired, and the PATTERN NUM
5ER to Sue Burnett 1150 Sixth
ivenue, New York 19, N. Y.
Send for your copy of the new
Spring issue of FASHION—Just off
he press. Book full of smart, up
o-the-mlnute styles, 15 cents.
STRAND
A combination of veteran per
armers and youngsters have
rought to the screen one of the
lost delightful pictures of the sea
Dn in “National Velvet,” at the
trand Theater.
Mickey Rooney, who stars: Don
id Crisp, Anne Revere, Reginald
wen and Arthur Treacher are the
eterans. Jackie ("The Human
omedy”) Jenkins, Elizabeth (“Las
ie Come Home”) Taylor and An
sla ("Gaslight”) Lansbury are the
oungsters. Together, under the
irection of Clarence Brown, who
as Innumerable hits to his credit,
ley have produced an exciting
rarm, human motion picture that
'ill live long in the memories of
lie . lillions who will see it and
>ve it.
Rooney, as Ml Taylor, an ex
ockey, provides a different char
cterlzation from his usual ones—
lis one is comparable to his work
i "The Human Comedy.’ As a
lsillusioned youngster who finally
inds a home with a family in a
mall English town, he becomes
•ainer of a horse won in a raffle
y the 12-year-old Velvet Brown,
hose passion is horses to the ex
usion of everything else.
Selected shorts complete the bill.
VENERABLE DIRECTOR
George Marshall, director of Par
mount’s "Murder, He Says,” with
red MacMurray and Helen Walker,
Just beginning his 33rd year in
lotion pictures.
STRnn
NOW BONDS
BUY
M-8-M’s”
Waficm#
A dorm* Irmm Pradwtita
IN TECHNICOLOR
tTMftlNO
MICKEY ROONEY
tOHtlt IIIIAIIIM
CKIif • TAVtoft
Selected
Short Subjects
effet's
nay be removed.
Wher polish jig large ..lece* of
•liver, rub lengthwise — not cross
wise or circular — and uae brisk
motions. If after polishing to re*
move tarnish, and after trashing
and drying thoroughly, you 11 buff
with clean flannel cloth, your
silver will reward you with a
blighter gleam.
Quick and easy way to rout
tarnish in one fell swoop from
big quantities of silver is the
electrolytic method. This is mere
ly a matter of corralling your
beauties into a big enamel vessel,
placing a small aluminum pot
cover at the bottom of it, and lay
ing in silver one piece at a time,
“ so that it either touches the aiu
11 mlnum or has contact with an
5 other piece of silver that toucaes
1 it. Now, placing the vessel of sil
ver on the stove, pour in hot
! water, and to every quart use a
1 teaspoon of common salt and one
® of baking soda. Keep water at a
~ boiling point until tarnish van
use STIFF SRuSe;
OAJ FW6QAVED
ishes. Then take out stiver, rinse
ind dry.
Because this method has Its
imitations, don’t try It on pieces
with a French-gray finish, can
dlesticks, pieces with hollow han
dles or those with oxidized effects
is part of their design.
To hold luster on all cleansed
ip hollow ware and flatware un
til you use it again, sheathe
dieces in the folds of silver wrap
-an impregnated flannel cloth
which protects brightness by draw
ng to itself the tarnishing agents
n the air.
-WE, THE WOMEN
“Temporary” Workers Kid
Themselves Into Failure
BY RUTH MILLETT
Hie man who retired after run
ning an elevator in Britain’s House
of Commons for 45 years, but failed
to get a pension because for all those
years he ranked as a “temporary
employe,” was
the victim of
the kind of atti
tude a lot of
people take to
ward their jobs.
I nstead of
admitting
to t h e m s e 1 ves
that they will
be working at
their same kind
of Job for years
to come and so
had better try
to do a job as
well as they
can, they let the MUlett
months and the years slip by while
they work haphazardly and think of
themselves as merely marking time,
“until something better comes
along.”
In this group are the women
who will probably never marry, yet
always think in the back of their
minds that their real job will some
day be running a home.
And so, though they may have
the brains and ability to make a
good thing of their jobs or to
carve out a real career for them
selves, they never get around to it.
They go right on for years working
on a temporary basis.
There 1s no percentage in either
men or women looking on a job as
temporary, unless at the same time
they are laying plans and working
f
toward the achievement of some
permanent career.
BECOME A FIXTURE
If they aren't making plans, they
most likely will become a fixture on
the temporary job or Just trade It
for another "temporary” one.
And they stand to lose more than
the elevator man who lost his
chance at a pension because he was
a "temporary” employe for 47 years.
They stand to lose their chance
at success and the satisfaction of
creating a plan for a career and
carrying it through to completion.
Club Notes
A meeting of the Queen's Daugh
ters will be held tomorrow afternoon
at 2:30 o'clock at the annex to the
Convent of the Sisters of the Holy
Ghost, South Mata street.
Miss Doris Colby, Miss Stasia Ger
vln and John DeloDmo, local hair
stylists, addressed about 100 mem
bers of the Y. M. C. A. Tri-Y clubs
last night at the Central YM.C.A,
A rummage sale will be held at
the First Baptist Church, Central
avenue and Grove street, tomorrow
from 10 a. m. to 4 p. m. by the
Willow street group of the church.
The annual dinner dance of Sher
dan Council, Knights of Columbus,
was held last night at The El ten,
with more than 200 members and
tuests of the organization attending.
John Fitzgerald and Edmond Crowe
were co-chairman for the affair.
ST A T EBB
starring DENNIS MORGAN
DANE CLARK « RAYMOND MASSEY o ALAN HALE
2nd Hit!
“LEAVE IT TO BI-ONDIE" with Penny Singleton
•MASH RNTIRTAINMINT
Dine and Dance
At PATSY BROWN’S
SILVER CHALET
ISA die Boyc# and Hla Band
Bter/ Saturday at 8:30 p. m.
ALHAMBRA
North Main St. Tel. 3-8323
LAST DAY
“THE SUSPECT”
“MOON LIGHT AND CACTUS”
Munlral Short - - - - News
Erl. - Sat.—2 Request Hit*
‘SPRINGTIME IN THE ROCKIES’
Betty Grable - John Payne
Carmen Mlrnmla
“MR. BUG GOES TO TOWN” .
Metrotone New*
&
KUN MING
Chinese-A merlcaa
RESTAURANT
144 EAST MAIN STREET
CHOW MEIN and Other Chinese
Pood to Tahe Home!
Open Dally II a. a to I a. at.
Saturday to 2 a. m.
Soaday 13 Noon to 1 a. m.
-CAPITOL
804 Bank St. Dial .1-8100
NOTICEl To the Ladles
Early American Dfnnerware
given out Tuesday and Wed
nesdays only.
TODAY - FBI.
“THE FLEET’S IN’”
Dorothy Lamour - Hetty Hutton
“NOTHING BUT THE TIILTH”
Boh Hope - Paulette Goddnrd
Kida!—FREE SHOW—Kidi.
Saturday Morning at 9:30.
Admission is by bringing I or
more cans of food. Benefit
is for relief of starving chil
dren In Italy.
Moynihan's
AT
Lake Hitchcock
Now reilrnw
GOLDIE AND HIS ORK.
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
NIGHTS
FINES'! FOOD A LIQUORS
PHONE - 1-9741
3no Stop* it !ui
kAnmon
1758 Bool
. Mato 81.
iDlal 3-8828
TODAY
Judy Garland - Mutant O’Brien
“MEET ME IN ST. LOOTS”
(In Technicolor!
KIU. - SAT.—“DARK WATERS"
and “MV PAL WOLP’
CAMEO
814
Baldwin St.
I. A ST DAY
WINGED VICTORY'’
Lon MncAlllater
“HER PRIMITIVE MAN”
Loulae Albrlton
Newa - - - - - Sharia
HEAR
Lt. Gov. Wilbert Snow
on
“WORLD PEACE
ORGANIZATION”
Fri., April 6, 8 P. M.
2nd Congregational Church
Chapel
PUBLIC INVITED
NO CHARGE
MERLE OBERON IN
ROLE OF MME. SAND
Shares Starring Roles
With Paul Mura in ‘Song
to Remember
Tar the first time In her screen
career. Merle Otoeron. wears pants
In her starring picture with Paul
Muni, Columbia's Technicolor "A
Song To Remember,” in which she
has the role of Mme. George Sand,
with Cornel Wilde in the romantic
lead as Chopin, Merle Oberon at
the State Theater, April 11-17.
Mme. Sand, it seems, wore ’em.
Pants, that is.
Not little unmentionable; not
those filmy things the harem beau
ties wore in the Cecil B. De Mille
picture, and which Schehera
zade, and Salome, and Cleopatra,
and some others are reputed to
have favored. Not even the pants
of the Chinese women, or the
things called ' slacks" which roam
the reaches of Hollywood from sun
up to sundown.
George Sand wore real pants.
Made of wool. Tailored, Replete
with weskit and clawhammer and
top hat.
Mme. Sand had reason to adopt
this mannish raiment, according to
Miss Oberon, who ordinarily doesn’t
favor pants for the fair sex. Ex
plaining why it was all right for
Mme. Sand, Miss Oberon said:
■‘George Sand lived in the early
nineteenth century, in Paris. She
had lived for many years on her
grandmother’s farm at Nohant be
fore she came to the city. There, she
wore pants because they helped her
have an authoritative manner.
Dressed as a girl, she couldn't im
press the farmhands.
"She found the same thing effec
tive when she went to Paris seeking
a literary career. Men would .buy
stories from men. They weren't in
terested in what a woman was writ
ing. So George Sand took to
pants.”
The lady was one of the foremost
heartbreakers of Europe in that, or
any, age. Born Aurore Dupin, she
married a country gentleman named
Oudevant, by whom she had two
children. Later she consorted with
MERLE OBERON
Alfred de Musset, the poet, and
with Chopin for some nine yean.
There were several other* with
whom her name has been linked —
enough, anyway, to convey an im
pression that the lady had charm*
which were in no way lessened by
the male attire,
VAN TBAOJS ”|;eATM
i2SBS««5Jr,%iesi
sms
Loews POL I
aflttlEEN W
4
LOEW’S POLI
ONE NIGHT ONLY
Wednesday
April 25th
Charles L. Wagner
Presents
VON FLOTOW’S
OPERA COMIQUE
MARTHA
Sponsored by the War Service
Committee of the Mattatuck
Musical Art Society, Inc.
Starring the Sensational
Young Soprano
Marguerite Piazza
AND CAST OF 65 ARTISTS
36 Piece Symphony Orchestra
A Samuel Wasserman
presentation
Mail Orders Now
MRS. J. W. BEECHER, 75
NEWTON TERRACE, CITY.
PHONE 3-0934
PUBLIC SALE AT McCOY’S
ON AND AFTER APR. 9th
PRICES: $4.80 - $3.60 - $2.40
$1.20, tax included
jnjiru a736
TODAY - PRI.
"ORCHESTRA WIVES”
G. Montgomery-A on Rutherford
"DARK MOUNTAIN”
Robert Lowery - Ellen Drew
Clpnrettea Sold 7 to 8 P# M.
Monday Thru Friday
— LAST DAY —
"Mft.S|i£FBNSW:
— ALSO —
i Jinn. i
GENE At TRY
••MELODY TRAIL”
CHESTER MORRIS
‘ONE MYSTERIOUS NIGHT*
TOURS. - PRI.
3-WONDER WESTERNS -«
SMILEY BURNETTE la
“CODE OF THE
PRAIRIES”
— Also —
BILL “HOP-ALONG CAS
SIDY” BOYD
“SECRETS OF THE
WASTELANDS”
— Plus —
-OKLAHOMA OUTLAWS”
CARTOON — SERIAL
Children 18c At All TiOMO
Buy War Bonds I Stamp