OCR Text |
Show ' - THE M1DVALE SENTINEL Th PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY Entered as Secona Class Matter at the Postoffice at Midvi le, Utah, under the Act of March 9, 187a HOWARD PETER C IVA E. BARROWS, Owners B. WOOLLEY, Editor & Publisher & CORRESPONDENTS' Mrs J T Ostler Miss Lorna Allgood HONEYBELLE Bonnie's Blabs L r BUSINESS WAS GO) GOO- D- Z3 'CO T MiD omt; 'Vv' tcsravtp 2936 ,S?!v) Prepared by - HUNGRY BREAKFAST Tradition steeps high the almighty holiday dinner! 'The family's hungry, tho earlier in the day . . . so . . . break down the age old let down the bars . . . and have friends or relatives in tradition for BRUNCH. The work is over early, which means the rest of the day is spent as you'd like, anrj the food so delicious it's sure to be talked about for years to come as being "the most fun holiday worn ing" ever. Let this simple menu do the trick for you. Broiled Ruby Grapefruit Crowns Chokechv-rr- y J iiy Cheese Eggs Honey Bran Muffins Milk and Coffee Assorted Candy and Nuts ... BROILED PINK GRAPEFRUIT CROWNS 1. t. Hat-dance- Jo-si- e Bo-ber- g The High Price of Speeding Washington Week r 8. 4. Va 1 There's no question about which rnrnes first on the breakfast list. The egg is the biggest box office magnet. Try EGGS BENEDICT 6. on another special occasion. It won't need much accompaniment since it's the whole works, but you These will really take the chill will want a fruit and beverage, cold a off blustery morning. EGGS BENEDICT CHEESE EGGS I. 1. Line Individual custard cups witlL..Bacon strips t. Break into center. 1 egg 5. Cover each with. 1 to. cream Salt and pepper 4. Bake at 825 15 min. for soft and 20 min, for hard cooked era. 6. Melt 8 tb. butter 8. Add and stir to 8 make tb. flour paste Vt X. salt kettle from stove and gradually add while stirring until smooth milk (heated) 1'4 8. Continue cooking over very low flame, stirring until thickened. 8. Serve over shirred eggs (above) and top all with Freshly grated nippy cheese Tieldi Sauce will serve approximately 6. T. Remove c Time: 20 min. aifted floor baking powdsr c 8 t. ..8 H t. salt Vi 4 , 1. Split, toast and butter t. nutmeg sugar 8 English Muffins 2. Place on each toasted roll half...Thin slice broiled or cold ham (Trim to fit) 8. Top with carefully trimmed poached eKBS. 4. Cover with Rnd serve. Mock Hollandaise Sauce NOTE: Toast rounds may pinch hit for muffins, but are not quite so good. MOCK HOLLANDAISE SAUCE tb. butter 1. Melt in ssueppan...! 2. Add and blend well.. 8 tb. flour L salt 8. Gradually add..... 4. Return to heat, thickened. I. Pour onto HONEY BRAN MUFFINS Temp. 425 1. Sift together- - V, c. milk itir - ect 1 I ... Experience Counts lat-ter'- s I gor i 1 gPjJg Daff ynitions By Paul H Gilbert PEACH: The other girl you never got on that double date. FOOL: Part of the familiar saying, "A fool & his money are soon parted." UTOPIA: Any place where you can reach out and touch Rita Hayworth. ALCOHOL: A liquid that makes smokeless powder, synthetic rubber & darn fools. FRENCH REVOLUTION: A period in" French history when many nobles were gelatined. BRIDLE SUITE: A horse stable SENSE OF HUMOR: What makes you laugh at something which would make you mad if it happened to you. CANNIBAL: A person who lives on other people's relatives. FILIBUSTER: What happens when you give someone the floor and they hit you on the head with it. MOUTH: What men & fish are safe until they open their. SUDDEN: Below the Mason Dixon line, as in "Sudden Fried Chicken." IRON CURTAIN: What jewel- - until slightly beaten "egg yolks 6. Mix well and cook over low heat stirring constantly. 7. Remove from heat and gradually add.. 1H tb. lemon Juice 8. Serve on Eggs Benedict. 8 slightly ers put over their windows at night. BIFOCAL: Part of the" optician song, "On A Bifocal Built for Two." YEHUDI: The man who calls you up when you're in the bath & can't answer. CONCEIT: What every man i privileged to have until he's successful. LIGHT: Something that if a cigarette hasn't got, it won't, BBC: NBC with a monocle. COLLEGE BOY: One who likes ties with dots, suits with stripes, & letters with checks. COMMUTER: A very dashing person. A man who PHILOSOPHER: :an enjoy a blonde's curls while knowing they have black roots. LIMBURGER: Swiss cheese without air conditioning. SULPHUR: Retail cost, like, "How much do these shoes sul- phur?" WOLFHOUND: longs to a wolf. A dog i It 't V I! :. in -- J mm L- -l HAT Companion set of coat & dress made to fit the tiny figure as specified by the U S Department of Agriculture. Give the coat that velvet touch! No 2727 is cut in sizes 1, 2, 3, 4. Size 2 coat, 2 yds 35 In; dress 1 yds 35 in; contrast yd 35 in. Every home sewer needs FALL WINTER that Pleated skirt on suspender top plus a smart little weskit spell style appeal in any little girl's vocabulary. Add a little scotch DEPARTMENT Midvale Sentinel W 19th St. New York 11. If 121 T SNAPSHOT GUILD si 1 1 .1 4 r 2 if - 1 t, I ' Jt s : ' ' X - Light through the windows ia wonderful for interior pictures.. frfl . The Most Dangerous Tree - fCrl PATTERN BydAless.o I f 19. 20, 21. 22 be- f n iPti SIZES ct a FASHION BOOK 2952 cap to make the whole thing perfect. No 2936 is cut in sizes 2, 4, C & 8. Size 4 requires l'4 yds 35 in for skirt; V2 yd 35 in for wes-k& 1 yds 35 in for blouse. Blouse & embroidery design Included in pattern. No 2952 (hat) is cut in head sizes 19, 20, 21 & 22. Any of these sizes requires V yd 18 in. Send 25c for Each Pattern with name, address & style number. State size wanted. Send 25c for Each Pattern with Name, Address & Style Number. State size desired. -- Address: delightful, inspiring presentation of the best fashion. Over 150 smart, practical easy to sew pattern designs for all ages. Price just 20 cents. Send now for your MOTH: An insert that spends the summer in a fur coat & the winter in a bathing suit. WITS: People whose brains wag smartly in repartee THESE WOMEN! f copy. t. pepper 1 . I 9797 I I Stir In. c. bran c seedless raisins 8. Beat well. egg 4. Add c strained honey ivt c milk Vi e. melted shortening 5. Add dry Ingredients to wet and stir about 40 times. 6. Fill greased muffin pans about full and bake. 8 field: large muffins. NOTE: These can be made beforehand and reheated in brown paper sack sprinkled with water at the same time eggs are cooking. 2. Draw light pencil line completely around the center of the grapefruit. With sharp knife, cut diagonal line inch above and Vi inch below pencil line. Turn sharp edge of knife in other direction and make same length cut to form a V. Knife blade must go completely to center of fruit and when cuts are complete around, grapefruit pulls apart in shape of crown. Loosen sections with knif and remove center core with scissors. Brush top with melted butter and place on broiler pan two inches beneath gas flame. Broil approximately u minutes, or until yellow rind is rich delicate brown color. Serve piping hot, garnished with maraschino cherry and tiny green leaf or piece of holly. 1 - i 'mm BERTHA LORENTZEN h 1 1 i r3 v Pi. pr A BRANCH v OFFICE .y. W L "Vl 09-- J I I OPENEP i VZ 0383-R- 2 - OH, I 0395-R- Ik ' FES3 Phone Midvale 266-Box 310, RDJ Phone Midvale 3380 - ? HOW COMP TWO HAT By Bonnie (Bunny) Olson Ever listened in on a. teleMrs D r Andrus Draper phone conversation? Well if you Mrs Margaret Shrewsbury Granite haven't, you've really missed Mrs Margena Ashby . East Midvalo Phone Midvale 633-Mrs Agnes Dansie Hanimaa something. Ask anyone who saw Phone Midvale 4203 Mrs J T Ostler 6andy the Junior assembly & heard Phone Midvala 266-Harold Carpenter Sandy rnone Midvale 4 the jokes Jim Marshall & Nick Mrs Clara B Beckstead West Jordan -- Phone Midvale I Loulias 'cracked to each other Mrs Ellen Nance Union Phone Mid over the phone. Held last Friday Subscription Rate, year . $3.00 in the school auditorium, the program was based on a 'mem Out of County, per year $3.50 ory' theme & important events of United tea Bf (Outside $6.00 per year Delivery not guaranteed) 49 were reviewed. by'Delores Day & Barbara Ballard. At intervals in their talk about a few ALL IS NOT GOLD THAT GLITTERS special sprees which took place last year, different skits appeared on the stage. Pat Jones put us all in a mellow mood with her rendition of "Sweethearts" & a win ter atmosphere was added when Don Antczack (Jordan s Mel Thorme) gave out with "Winter Wonderland". Barbara Ballard was really a riot while giving a reading. A special feature of the program was a chorus made up strictly of Juniors. They sang a variety of songs to go with the different occasions that came up. Members of this melody mob were Ann Aylett, Joyce Gordon, Roberta Payne, Sharon Lester, Sylvia Sechuck, Russell Robinson, Delano Rasmussen & Jim Marshall. Adding a spot of color to the show was Sarah Lee Erickson & Katherine Layba in their artful portrayal of the "Mexican Hidden talent was also displayed Friday when cute Vigil did a dancing act. Seems that Nick Loulias decided to add the last few laughs to last week's assmbly when he stumbled onto the stage overloaded with Christmas mail & read off some humorous letters to Santa from a few of Jordan's students & teachers. However the real laugh came when he forgot his closing lines. The climax of the big show was the Junior chorus caroling a few Christmas songs to put us in the Yuletide spirit. Mr wrote the script for the Juniors & the Junior class officers Jim Marshall, Delores Day & Sharon Denny directed it. your Bunny When we bought a Crosley the salesman told us they were economical. We wish he'd told it to the judge. Judge Arthur J Mays in this case. He fined us $25 with $5 remitted if we went to traffic school. The chafge vas speeding. That seems like a full sized fine for a pint sized car. The case did bring to our attention the matter of trafficfines in Salt Lake. It is estimated that about $500 000 in fines for" speeding, parking violations, etc are collected annually in Salt The next Presidential election Lake. Yet the streets are no better than average, worse than many is a long way off, but the policities. Many dangerous intersections need traffic signals & don't ticians of both parties are busy have them. The parking problem is terrific. At many points traf- building their fences & cultivat their fields. The national, U . i fic m'nL U1U "c .if,,. " mirlVlnrV" T"1V tf VI ing "acu 111 ziAnnanfjnn "v u"umwu MifVl aiS1,tt" state & local organizations are lanes to avoid the near pile ups that now occur when a car stops doing the usual ground work & incidentally, finding the usual for pedestrians. difficulties in raising as much The system of divided highways, from which children are money as they think they should fenced off for their own safety, of cloverleaf intersections, orhaveborne men in Republican overpasses is conspicuous by its absence. These ideas have worked circles think high that their party Utah traffic well in other cities. Why are Salt Lake & engin must make a come back next eers or other responsible persons so far behind the times in mak-- 1 time if it is to survive as one of the two major political forces. So far, the GOP hasn't had ing uiem realities nerer The public is somewhat at fault too in creating traffic prob- much to cheer about. The New York senatorial election is in lems. Mr & Mrs America have too much the idea that they only point. The Republicans put their can shop in one central business district. This contributes ma-- , best foot forward in John Foster aThe terially to congestion, parking problems & traffic hazards. When maneof very hi gh order. Dewor for Governor same the often & to can closer party, including home equal they get shoph went all out in the effort to less money (because of lower overheads) they are nuts it they cy. Democrats also him ' had a very strong candidate in don't take advantage of the situation. Lehman, who had mad'? Think it over. Perhaps you 11 save yourself an overtime paik- - Herbert Mr fJne record governor ing fine or speeding fine. Or you might just avoid a bad acci-- Lehman endorsed the Trumanprogram with one or two excepdent by staying out? of heavy traffic. such as the Brannan am PersonallyJ we don't buvJ anything- in Salt Lake unless it is plan & won. It was a severe ' unavailable in the south part of the county. We hate that auto setback for the Republicans. Even so, the Republicans did trip into Salt Lake. make a good showing. Mr Dulles is nowhere near as well known to the rank & file of voters as Mr Lehman. Yet the The Utah Peace Officers Association has suggested that inmajority was less than cur- 200,000, in an election in which their out before officials twice think booting coming city a very large vote was cast. rent cons to make room for loyal political friends. Being a cop The biggest test, it is' gener is something that is not learned in 15 minutes hanging around ally felt, will come in Ohio next headquarters. It takes a fair amount of brains, courage & tramhis se at Mr Taft wishes to be the 1952 President- ing. Public safety should not be made a political football. He is the out- il4 Immmo fiisr ial candidate. . wU uic umcr uauu, a puuwj J standing Republican now in con-- a uau or merticient as any otner gress at nas me strongest miiuorgaiuauuu. n uiai uaa the case its time for a change. But a new mayor & councU would enceta qo weu to look things over pretty caretuny oeiore giving uic opposition are clear cut He is passionately opposed to the welheave ho. Any change should be a change for the better. fare state & to the Truman program in general. He is, therefore, one of the few top Republicans who could run against Mr Truto world? the What is the most dangerous tree in According man, or another Democrat holdthe National Board of Fire Underwriters, it's the symbol of Yule-tid- e ing Truman views, with a posiof his own. He tive cheer & good will the Christmas tree. The long & tragic wouldprogram not adopt the "me too" record of deaths, injuries & mannings many to children -c- attitude which brought so much criticism on Governor Dewey last statement. that aused by holiday fires fully bears out time. lhis certainly doesn't mean that you should not have a innst- - There is a revival of speculamas tree. You should. But it does mean that certain elementary tion concerning General Eisenhower as the GOP candidate. precautions should be followed to the letter & kept constantly It is said that he has wearied of his work at Columbia, & has in mind. developed a new interest in pubshould be placed lic service. His vast prestige & it is less hazardous. It Buy a small tree public following would make away from radiators, heaters & the fireplace, Candles should him about as a cannever be used. Use only approved electric light sets. Don't use didate as can formidable be imagined. A tough Republican problem paper, cotton or other flammable materials for decorations. Never leave the lights burning when the house is unoccupied. Dis- is how to offset Democratic strength In the great centers of pose of gift wrappings promptly. Get rid of tree the when needles population. In the New York for instance, Mr Lehman begin to fall. This means its dry & ready to burst into flames. Use race, carried five counties, & four a tree standard which 01 tneseonly were in New York City. equipped with a bucket to hold water in the trunk immersed. Water will keep the tree fresh longer just Mr Dulles carried the rest. But the big majority Mr Lehman like it does with cut flowers. piled up in the city did the job. Bluff da! Crescent MIDVALE SENTINEL Friday, Dec 9, 1949 Page 9 By ANDREW SPRAGUE 111 "Well, you practically invited them to live with 11s . . e repeating over and over again, 'We're not losing a daughter we're getting a on'l" Pictures Indoors by Daylight Are vou neglecting By John Van Guilder your pic ture taking activities now that cold weather is here again? If so, it is time to remind you how easy it is to take daylight pictures right in the house. Where ever a window oners a iairiy unobstructed view of the sky, you wiil find beautiful light flooding into the room. Add a little light to the shadows, set your camera for the proper exposure & you'll be all set to keep that family album right up to date regardless of the weather. Here is how to do it. First, place your subject about three feet or so from the window that you have chosen. Have the person turn his head slightly from one side to the other until you determine the position at which the light is most pleasing. Next, study the shadows. If they look awfully dark when you squint at subject, you will have to brighten them too. You can use a piece of white cardboard or a sheet draped over a chair to catch some of the light from the window & direct it back Into the shadows of the face. Sometimes, however, light from other windows or reflected from other walls will be all yo need for a fill in light. You caa also use hundred watt bulb or a photo flood bulb in a simple reflector. The light should not overpower the light from outbut should be strong side, enough to reveal considerable detail in the shadow areas. Next, focus your camera & adjust the lens & diaphram for correct exposure. This exposure will depend, of course, upon the strength of the light reacMrx the subject. If the subject is sitting in the direct rays ol the sun, a snapshot exposure caa be made. Normally, however, a somewhat longer exposure will be necessary. With the simpler types of cameras, a short time exposure of from one to four seconds will usually suffice. With the adjustable types, try or about of a second at f6.3. With the fast "pan" films. you can, of course, cut these exposures right in half. tinaiiy, take you picture. The results, I feel certain, will surprise & please you. Further more, you will find that it's iua to make pictures right in the fa miliar Interior of your own home. 1-- 5 0 |