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Br PHYLLIS E. MITCHELL 224 Ontario St., Lockport
East Wilson Methodist Church
A LMIGHTY GOD, maker of ail things, help us feel
closer to Chris* and have more faith in Him. Help us do the things that are right and follow la His paths at all times. If we have done anything w r o n g , please forgive us. Bless the people in foreign countries
Phyllis .^ho do n o t know about God and His love. Help them to know more about the living Christ. Help us realize Christ died for us and rose so that we might live. Bless the missionaries who give their lives for Christ's work. We ask this In Jesus' name. Amen.
TMs L e n t e n P r a y e r was selected by a special committee as one of the best submitted for publication. (The competition is closed and no more entries can be accepted.) The Courier-Express will award the writer a Bible and a certificate of commendation for "literary talent and spiritual devotion." More Lenten Prayers and Thoughts will appear in The Courier-Express each day until Easter.
Plan to Make Chicken Stock
Make yourself some chicken stock with giblets, necks and wing tips plus seasonings.
Strain; then c l s r i f y it by bringing it to a boil, stirring constantly, with a slightly beaten egg white and a crushed egg shell. Strain again through several thicknesses of cheesecloth.
A Woman'i View
VARIED SIZES—Big and little polka DOTS AGAIN—A silk scarf-square has dots are teamed in this scarf-square by giant discs in purple, turquoise and Glentex tied into a big collar effect. green on a white ground.
Scarves Spring Style News By HONOR McGRATH
Courier-Express Fashion Editor WITH COLOR — Scarves
are news for spring. Prints and dots are big. Because basic colors for dresses, suits and coats are neutral, accent is given by eye-catching scarves.
The Glentex collection ao> cents collarless fashions, to fill in or drape collars of suits and coats, to supply the soft look of bulk above the waistline, to tie on the head in French Riviera manner.
FLORAL PRINT — Polka dots, checks, plaids and Paisleys look as fresh as spring. Florals are in glorious colors and airy spaced designs on silk and chiffon scarves.
Scarf colors have greater impact than ever with the bland and muted tones of the new ready-to-wear. Sand tones to harmonize with the lightened beiges play a star part and range from natural, champagne and putty to suntan and sun bronze. Flamingo tones cast a pink-tinted hue on scarf patterns in pastel beach coral, tiger lily, lobster and deep orange flame. Greens are refreshing accents in polka dot and checked scarf patterns.
ALL COLORS — Dots in every size and color splash across scarves of all sizes and shapes. Giant dots, confetti dots, coin dots, egg dots, moon dots, splash dots appear in endless combinations to give
Your Feet
FOOT STRUCTURE, AN ENGINEERING MIRACLE The design of the human
foot is an unsurpassed masterpiece of engineering which has excited the curiosity of architects, artists, and engineers t h r o u g h the ages. Leonardo da Vinci, artist and engineer, used the foot for studies in bridge construction.
The functional versatility of this highly specialized organ allows body support, balance, standing, walking, and running at any tempo with equal ease and coordination.
The foot, an intricate composition of bones, muscles, ligaments, blood vessels, and nerves Is a rugged mechanical miracle. However, the constant abuse of concrete and hardwood floors, overw o r k , o b e s i t y , hereditary structural weaknesses, mass produced shoes, and lack of proper preventive foot care cause n u m e r o u s arch all* ments. Foot c ramps , low back pain, general body fatigue, and a m u l t i t u d e of other arch complaints are usually the result.
In health and disease this magnificent walking machine deserves the best car* and maintenance available. Your family Podiatrist (Foot Specialist) devotes his entire professional life in rendering this service. NEXT WEEK —Corns, They Can Be Eliminated. Sponsor: WJt.Y. Podiatry Society
B&PW Group To Hear Revieiv
A review of Mary Stewart's book, "Nine Coaches Waiting" will be given by Mrs. Lloyd N. Beuthal at a meeting of the Business & Professional Women's Club of the Protestant Home for Children at 8 Friday evening at the home in Niagara St.
Miss Louise Ellis is chairman of the evening. In charge of tickets are Miss Elizabeth Fruauff and Miss Dorothy Mosier.
The refreshments committee, headed by Mrs. Edna S. Newton and Miss Louise Seel, includes Miss Pearl V. Bishop, Miss Agnes B. Kyle. Miss Althea A. Hubbard and Miss Iva M. Crowder.
Director of Charities To Speak After Mass
The Very Rev. Msgr. William L. Wozniak, director of Catholic Charities of Buffalo, will speak at the annual Communion breakfast of St. Louise Guild of Sisters of Charity Hospital.
The Mass will be celebrated at 9 next Sunday morning in the chapel of the hospital in Main St. Breakfast will be in the hospital's guild rooms. Miss Isabelle E. Murphy, president, is honorary chairman. Mrs. Charles G. Gould i* general chairman.
Good for Stuffing Do you have a favorite
corned beef hash recipe? Let It do double duty and use it sometimes as a stuffing for green peppers.
Your Family Finance
Talk Is Cheapest Thing; on Market
By MORTON YARMON NEW YORK (WNSi—Think
ing of joining the millions of Americans already in the stock market? If you do, you'll hear a number of pat expressions that are part of the talk of Wall St.
Some are partially true, others plain untrue. All can be dangerous to you if you pay too much attention to them.
Here are half a dozen of these, along with the explanation of each:
You can't lose much in penny stocks.
You can't lose more than you put into them, but you can lose that without too much trouble. A stock that sells for 15 cents a share sounds cheap enough. It costs $150 to buy 1,000 shares.
You find penny stocks generally in oil, gold and uranium. Trying to locate such materials is expensive and uncertain. Therefore the companies that offer you penny stocks generally have little more than hope to give you for your money.
Buy 'em and forget 'em. That would have been sound
advice if you had been lucky enough to have bought General Motors back in 1923. A thousand dollars invested then
• Sure Sign of Spring
is your yen for pale beige shoeing.'
Here, a pump mellow as pearls,
fashioned of soft lustre calf, newly
detailed with lattice cutouts.
Its escort, a matching leather bag.
French Room Originals,
$1298
I
would be worth many thousands today, plus dividends through the years. If you had gone into Stutz Bearcat, Associated Gas & Electric or Kolster Radio, that $1,000 would have been written off "years ago.
There's no point in getting an ulcer every time your stock goes down an eighth of a point, but you wouldn't run .off to the Caribbean if you had just bought a candy store,
• so why bury your head when :you buy a piece of United States Steel or A T & T?
You can't lose taking profits. Maybe not, but you may not
be sure you're getting all you deserve from a stock. For example, you may miss a dividend. Again it may be worth your while to keep your stock at least six months before selling so you can benefit from the 25 per cent maximum rate of the capital gains income tax.
If the company in which you're investing seems to have a p r o m i s i n g future, why shouldn't its stock continue to rise? Remember that you pay a commission every time you buy or sell.
The previous price means nothing.
It's true that the day-to-day fluctuations in the market value of a stock have little meaning for you if you are investing for the long pull. Such factors as the earnings of the company, its dividend history and rate, its management, and •the prospects for its future are the things to watch.
However, if you're in for a (fast profit, the daily price | changes of a stock have a lot to do with what's going to
" happen to it tomorrow and the day after. A stock that is selling today at 100, was 90 last week, 105 the week before, certainly promises to be more volatile than another that has stayed with a two-point or three-point range for the last six months.
The public is never right. On this principle you would
buy when others are selling, and sell when the rest are buying. It's a fine idea, of course, to anticipate the action of the market and to get ahead of everyone else.
The important thing to keep in mind, however, is that it's largely the opinion of the public about a stock that controls its movement. If a lot of people want to buy it, up it goes; if they want to get rid of
,it, it moves down. You've nothing to worry
about with the SEC in business.
This is probably the most dangerous myth of all. It's true that the Securities it Exchange C o m m i s s i o n stops many of the abuses that brought on so much trouble in 1929, like manipulations by Insiders, but it can't do more than it's authorized to.
On any prospectus you'll read: "The Commission does not pass upon the merits of any securities nor does it pass •upon the accuracy or completeness of any offering cir. cular or other selling literature."
This is a warning to you to do a lot more checking before you invest your hard-earned savings.
Now, What Do YOU Believe?
C. Sibley
the classic motif a new look 'for spring. « Black polka dots border one , scarf while smaller pastel dots spatter the center of the square. Large and little dots in a moon and satellite effect give interest to a scarf. Large overlapping discs in a trio of colors create an unusual over-all design for another square. •
SEVEN SEAS—Oversize designs set a new direction in conversation - making s c a r f prints with boldness in execution and excitement in color.
Brilliant flying fish, lobsters, sailboats and fishing schooners are the striking motifs used for a group of scarves
aptly called "Seven Seas."
By CELESTINE SIBLEY Women's News Servict
BUT WHAT ELSE?—It was one of those conversations in an elevator springing from heaven knows what, and, of course, n e v e I finished. "What DO you believe in?" an a c • quaintance asked me. And then, laughing, h e answered himself: "Oh, I know, u n w e d mothers. B u i what else?"
Before I could cope with the joking reference to one of my columns, much less make serious answer, the elevator stopped and wo all poured out, heading in separate directions.
THE PROPER THINGS— The question has turned in my mind for some hours now. What DO you believe in? It indicates a conviction that I probably don't believe in the proper things. The reference to unwed mothers, made in levity, probably comes from the notion that I am for sin with a capital S.
The fact that the question came up in an elevator is not at all surprising. It's not the kind of questiob you're often called on to answer solemnly and thoughtfully, particularly to casual acquaintances. It's fitting that it should be a part of a fragmentary, doomed-to-premature-death elevator conversation.
AWKWARD T I M E—And yet it bothers me not to have been able to say quickly and efficiently and eloquently what I believe in. It bothers
me that after some thought I am still awkward and uneasy with the question. To say your religious convictions are Christian is only a beginning.
So much of your belief in Christianty depends on interpretation. Some of the crulest crimes in history have been committed in the name of Christian love. Hatred and unkindness and greed frequently are cloaked in righteousness.
BROTHERHOOD—In a way it's like brotherhood. Of all the things that have been issued in connection with Brotherhood Week, one of the best is a quotation from the Wichita (Kan.) Beacon. Everybody favors brotherhood, says this editorial, stating:
"If everybody agrees, what is the problem? Why not just practice Brotherhood and quit talking about it. The problem is that it is easier to talk about a virtue than to practice it. Lip service is the hypocrite's way of keeping from looking at his conscience . . . But talk should lead to action. Words without deeds are impotent."
BELIEF SHOULD SHOW— A durable, acted-upon belief I should show. If you believe j in loving your neighbor as yourself, for i n s t a n c e , j wouldn't it be as plain to see as the color of your hair or the size of your nose?
Faith Baldwin, also writing of brotherhood, said a good thing. "Every man is diminished by any man's bias and one reason why we do not truly love our neighbor is that we make no effort to know or understand him. We rest upon the oars of
preconceived prejudice. . . . All men suffer and rejoice. Each is born through a natural channel of pain, and each in the body dies.
BASIC NEEDS—"When people universally realize that all are united by the common bond of mortality and by the basic needs . . . the need to worship and to love, to be housed and fed, to work and play—perhaps we will have learned to understand—which is to love spiritually, and there will be peace and brotherhood on earth."
Maybe it's well to have somebody ask us that question occasionally, even a casual acquaintance in an elevator. Maybe it's well to inventory our beliefs and to try a bit harder to practice them. What DO you believe
TEELA-WOOKET In Vermont's Gr—n Mountain*
3 Camp Sessions EQUITATION. ARCHIRY
Ji»n« 2* . July I GIRLS RIDINOXAMP
Julf^ • August 29 Girls 6-16. tiding, land 4 water sports, camping trips. Rat* $373 $525. No •xtros. Outfit may b# r*nt*d.
CAMP FOR ADULTS 4 FAMILIES August 31 • S«pt*ma*r 11
Riding far baginnari, experienced & advanced. Arch*ry, swimming, golf, tennis. Catalog and appointment by request. Buffalo Representative: Mrs. Richard T. Marlette, 118 North Lon* Street, WiUiamavUle, New York, PLaxa BTf.
RAZOR or SCISSORS HAIR SHAPING
9 8 6 KENMORE AVE • tEDFORD 719f t
FURS r-E'UBIBKB
HWIiBISinisWI'BWe^M
by FLEISCHMAN 237 Delaware MO. 2860
Furriers Since 1924
HI ST\ LI\C. as low as $ 3 5
OHANDLE 474 MAIN, WA. 9430. Open Monday and Thursday to 9 P. M.
Mail Orders add 25c—Additional Post Office Charges on C.O.D.s. • - ,
To Wed in Florida The marriage of Mrs. Ethel
R. Boyle to Peter N. Metzger of Largo, Fla., formerly of Buffalo, will take place Saturday, April 23, at St. Patrick's Church in Largo. Mrs. Boyle is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Reger of Post Rd., WilliamsvUle.
A smart woman is quick to sense the fashion importance of th * walking suit! The slim skirt is beautifully balanced vlrh a deep - sleeved, finger-tip coat. Notched lafiels, interesting stitched detail, jeweled touches I Shown here, monotone wool boucle in cornflower blue, fresh mint or beige-from an exciting collection of styles in half sizes, priced at 39.98.
' rtV-llrjaTlgi*'»-••
r Suits, 3rd Floor
Hengerer's Downtown open till 9 Monday night
cropped, carefree, cdsuftl.,.
Our Bolero Bobs
2 00
• i§r... .""MI .U!**y
Perky and young as the charming new suit-lines of the season. A love of a hairdo personalized for you by our experts . . . and ably assisted by a Custom Salon permanent.
very, very special at 9 , 5 0
(Antoine prices slightly higher)
Alio at Hengerers Amherst Beauty Salon
call AT. 6666 . . . or come in
BEAUTY SALON, H iNGEf t i rS SIXTH FLOOR
We feature expert Revlon manicures; Miss Clairol Hair Color Baths; OgUvie Sisters' preparations for hair health. «1960
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