OCR Text |
Show Tfam BRIDGE CLUB Mis, Carrie Peterson end Mrs. Sam Mylcr wen hostesses to the Library Benefit Bridge Club Friday afternoon at tbe Magna Womens' Clubrooms. A dainty one o'clock luncheon waa was aerved to 28 guests. Bridge vae tbe diversion of the afternoon. The prize for high score was awarded, and Mrs. Sam Mykr won the luncheon set givea away. THE I.1AGIIA TIUES bcsad E Extend at FriJay at Magas, Utah tit the poatoffk at Magas, Utah aa accoad-da- n na3 aaatttf act of Cong roe of March 3, 1179. SUBSCRIPTION RATES 32.00 Six Moacht Payable la Adraact Om Year J1.00 Advert iaing Rate Circa oa Application fy. H. A. JARVIS Helms Beaton. Mrs. M. Sadl- tZLT SATIETY er. Mr. and Mrs Mark Bailey, Kira and Mrs. Val Black. Mr. and Mrs. Let Hales, Mr. and Mrs. Matt Pettcietoa, Mr. and Mrs. George La than, Mr. Mrs. R. and Mrs. So ten Nelson, Hark Mrs. Robert and and Mr. Apple cat. Games were played and acorc prizes given to Mrs. Robert Harknets. son Editor aad Pabliafact and Mr. Pettcmoa. Consolation es were awarded to Winter Rates priz- Mrs. Sadler aad ' when register- ing oak apodal for Ali Expense Sates. $7X0 . Owj hMkMi HOTEL ttEVcctfors Qt. VU C. W. Waat Sak Leha W. B. MMa a - a Lady: But dont you find that horseback riding gives you a headache! Instructor: No madams, just the reverse. Mo Cause can red pitted cherries and enough water to make one cup liquid. Add four tablespoons sugar, nnd pour over gelatin. Whan dissolved, cooL When beginning to set, add the cherries and the diced bannow whenever we want them. anas. 8errs cold, topped with Theres no more regretting the whipped cream. This recipe serves shortness of the cherry aeaaon. i Cherries aye always ripe. And Cherry Ice: . Press three-fourtthe wise housewife of today keeps several cans on her shelves so that of the cherries and the Jnice from she can concoct n dellcioua cherry a No. 8 can of red pitted cherries s -dessert at n moments notice, in through a sieve. - Boll - one-half cup sugar, one and this way aha will always be ready for unexpected guests who relish of cups water, three tablespoons corn syrup until it threads, unexpected desserts. Try one of then these recipes for tonights dinner. beatenpour slowly ovar on stiffly egg white. Add three Cold and 8 west tablespoons lemon juice and twe - Cherry and Banana B pongs: tablespoons maraschino cherry Soak one tablespoon gelatin In jnice. and the mashed cherries. two tablespoons cold water. Heat Freeze as lencream. - THt to boiling the syrup from a No. 8 recipe servesany from eight to en. CIHERRIE3 every day In the Vhat - modern canning methods have done for ns. Real sour cherries, pitted and ready to make a juicy pie or a cobbler, are on hand telephone In your owsThomt your friends eta reach you quickly and you can call thorn any tima you 'wish, tt will nut counties! errands for you and is always ready for important calls in case of sickness or emergency. Rhoumotfsm, Nawritia, Lwnbogo, Sdotico, Muscular Paint, Peri- odic Paint. Dr. Ml W Asplr-lO- ni relieve tjulckljr, pleasantly, does not up-e-et the stomach or cause Constipation. Mr. Marlow, Red Wing. Minn t Kavs used Dr, Kilns- -, for Colds and toould not cal safe nnlcss I had it in the Komis. If gives tuck quick rsUsf." Your druggist has Dr. MiW Asplr-MIn- t. Why dont you ask him kbout it? a rtdwn rw um i s arwrva. mm k IHM tWa IM Ihfek. Aapir-Ml- nt i Urn risu SraH ! OR. Ml LBS .. " - ' t six wo aka trial mhtrtpdm THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR Publish hr Tn Cmmu In It van vtU M Ua an? am ana at Um wart frit tta am mm amm aa araU aa aarUBaota aaalai la aa anukna'a aI Saanaa, aducaUoa. wtla, M. Tan vUl ha ala la taarlaaa aa idaiila at aaina aa Wuhniilau, Aaa 1 aa Uw ataar faatana. ymm .ilnabial.H, atmka feat Mu Ow Omaanan emu Koanvoa, Bask ' Plaaa aaa aa n ais waak trial Tr aaa Bn t ----- --- - TO MAKE BOOMERANG RETURN TO TOUR FEET QPAGHETO dinner never fail to please and offer a splendid means of varying the weeks menus. Delicious Cooked in a flavorfn sauce may be served as It cornea from the can orSpaghetti may be combined with meat in numerous appetizing, quicktime main dishes for economical dinner menus. At the end of a busy afternoon of shopping, or dub or committee meetings, you will welcome the spaghetti dinners below, as any of them may be prepared, with the exception ol dessert. In about half an hour. Desserts may be made ready In th morning, or ice cream or other quicktime desserts can bo substituted Servo these nourishing, easily prepared, economical spaghetti dinnei and note the enthusiasm of every member of tho family! Cooked Spaghetti in Tomato Sauce Fried Apple Rings Buttered Aaparagua on Toast Bran Muffin., Grape Jett, Individual Caramel Custards Coffee Mixed Hot Biscuit IT OAR EDGE OFBOCXr ke e boomerang. like the one in the drawing; out of csrdbocrd or xL Place the boomerang oa u book, with oao aide extending over ;e, and bold the book in front of you, slanting upward, and about 1 with your shoulders. With a pencil In your band strike the nng and It wilt circle the room, coming back and fatting at your be force with which you strike the boomerang moat bo regulated also of the room In which the trick to performed. If you strike hard In s small room It will hit a watt, and If you strike It tp it may come hack and hit you ut the waist ng -- Coffee Roll. Cherry Cobbler Butter ,W Top Milk raelp Casserole of Meat and Spaghetti 1 tablespoon butter or bacon fat; 1 medium size onion;-!-pouground beef; ,4 teaspoon salt; dash of pepper; 1 medium' can Cooked Spaghetti; cup erumbled and battered Rice Flakes. Cook minced onion in skillet with fat until very slightly brown, add meat and eook, stirring frequently, for a nd to etoan Coffee Mow few mhmtes until meat Is slightl. brown. Season with salt and pep per. In a buttered casserole o, baking diah, place a Jpyer of the meat, add a layer of Spaghetti, then repeat uaing x second layei of each. Add 34 cup eolTwater. Sprinkle over top with buttered Rice Flakes and bake in moderate oven twenty minutes, d, you-tucke- d Cooked Spaghetti in Tomato Sauce Small Hamburg Patties Apple, Celery and Nut Salad Blonde Waitress : I have stewed kidneys, boiled tongue, fried liver and pigs feet Diner: Dont tell me your troubles, sister, give me some ham and. 1 , Poor Bill, he took just one ehanee, but it was one too many. Take chances, and chances are you wont have many chances left to take. A diligent worker hasnt the time to envy others their jobs, hes too busy working limself up to the kind of a job others will envy. The reason no woman has ever become president is because no women has ever reached the required age. 8ocltl worker: What is your name, my man!. Convict : No. 888. S. W. Oh, but that isnt your real name. Convict: No, just my pen name. If farmers eould learn to turn their wheat nto lipstick, face powder, cigarettes, or other really useful things, ' movie films the trouble of agriculture would be ended. Why dont you like the girls! Too biased, what Theyre too biased. do you mean!" 4 Well, its bias this and bias that, until 4 Im busted. ? Squire Perkins: Nell, after I die, you would marry Deacon -- Brown-. Why so Hiram! Squire: I wish Nell: Well, the deacon trimmed me ' on a horse trade once. Yourself In' the department open-mouthe- Buttered Cauliflower or Cabbag.' Fruit or Head Lettuce Salad r Pure Apple Butter Cocoanut Cream Pie EXTENDS n the you watched, breathless, first flickering motion pictures! When little tubes in your ean and listened to the feeble, squeeky voicee reproduced by the first phonograph t TODAY your children scarcely look up from their play when au airplane soars msjesticslly across the sky. "And you gaze with uncomprehending interest at a picture in your daily paper above the legend, transmitted by radio from the scene of the disaster. Knowledge is crowding us. Miracles of science are happening so fast that our poor little minds simply havent time to grasp the significance of them. What we should like to know is, are we destined to become swamped in a billowing sea of marvels! Or, Is it possible that we are simply being prepared for a great burst of light and life so dazzling in depth and immensity that even the keenest minds among ns will be stupified with amazement! We wonder. - BOOMr-ESANGWUEfc- job ia small. And your rewards are few ; temember that the mighty oak Was onee a nut like you. Do you remember sensations of twe and amazement, when you taw the first automobile creeping along the street! When Casserole of Meat and Spaghetti STRIKE THE )ont woiry if your We Wonder Bg JOSXFHINX GIBBON Hriaa Fao UctHata D tractor, aug-gett- Z o o nenn: How do the freshmen keep these dinky green caps on their heads t Bill: Vacuum pressure. you are not living up to the standard yon would require in like' position. Most of ns need more thought on whet would I do in Most of ns could improve another e place! a whole lot if we would be perfectly unbiased, in. passing judgment on our own acts. In order to do this try to eliminate the idea of showing yourself favor. - Look at yourself as if you were another person. . gpfi. C AX hose 4 - Now boys said the teacher, I want to test your knowledge of geology. Jones, tell me what you know about alabaster. Jones: Yes sir, he was the one who caught the Forty Thieves. where you work, what would you expeet of the man in the position yon now oeenpyt Stop and think this over and then aak yourself what a man in yoor position eonld do to make himself most useful in the operation of the plant. If you answer these questions honestly for yourself you may conclude that (U. aaaaaaaa. 'TICKSofl-lNSZ- Take A Look Oac. i did. To Teel Ashamed If you were' the "I She : Back in the City again! I thought ydu were a farmer. He: You made the same mistake that I ' In pllMM a.a.a - - - - , Inexpensiv e Spaghetti Dinners Help to Vary the Weeks Menu ye, 4 blood-poisoni- v v w Clip thia coupon and mail k wkh 1 1 foe (Taaal three-fourth- The fountain Ctates Telephone 4 Telegraph Company vvvvvvvv ww v m rV m a v uwvu A DOLLARS WORTH - aa a a a -- your next call from your neighbor's telephone a call to us for service of you r own. bir-liU-si w wa eight."' Eikt Horae or egg! In the smoking room of a big hotel the Scot had been boring everyone with tales of the great deeds he had done. Well now, said the Englishman at last, suppose you tell os something you cant do, and, by jove. Ill undertake to do myself. Thank canna replied the Scot pay my bill here. One of the difficulties in preventing infection is the attitude of some people toward first-aid- . Some of these big think room to get a trifling going to the first-ai- d scratch dressed is like a child going to mothater to have the bump kissed. First-ai- d tendants and doctors hear that protest regularly. A wholesome respect for germs is one of the first principles of safety. A germ is too tiny to be seen without a powerful microscope but it hss millions of relations. They wait for a break in the akin, a cut or even a scratch that hardly draws blood where they can enter. The hnman body is a wonderful piece of mechanism and not the least remarkable thing about it is its ability to kill off the germs that enter the blood stream But there is a limit to what the body can stand. If it is not in first class shape or if there are too many million germs, a case of results. No man can tell when he is in a position to resist the germs of infection. He may be aa big and as strong as an ox bat it sometimes seems that the bigger he is the harder he falls. , Germs of infection ean, and have pat the K. O. on even a heavyweight champion. You needn't feel ashamed to go to the first-ai- d room for help. fa yczr neighbor's With d. Mamma, what is a speakeasy! A speakeasy, my son, is a place where a man goes in optimistically and comes out misty optically. Reformer i Why dont yon fight against your longing for drink? When you are tempted, think of your wife at home, Stew: Madam, when the thirst is upon me I am absolutely devoid of fear.- - TELEPHONE Colds, HeoJoche, Nauvolgio, Steno: (Sweetly) Someone told Mr. Turton that tbe bain of our heads are numbered. Now he wants to know if there isnt some place where he can get the back numben. YOUR ViMwe two-year-ol- Because you have ATHLETES FOOT you should be a letter man. he-me- IS Boss i A man is never older than he feels. Now this morning I feel as fresh as a dont imagine Cherries Always Ripe a w Give me a sentence with the word judic ious Well, ham is not one of the judicious. " '7 tto. lerlaMT I italla are yon getting on with, your lee - "Very well, indeed. We have not had much honey, but the bees have stung my mother-in-laseveral times. It matters not hqw straight the gate, IIow charged with punishment the scroll, 1 am the master of my fate, I am the captain of my eouL Mea-dam- for too G Write errntions, raising! i:.J " td Lru How Here is a quotation from the December Safe Worker, "All the safety work that haa been done in thia country during the jmat 20 year La of no avail whatever if the individual fails to realise that the problem is largely his own individual affair. Thia ia the base of all our safety work. Get the individual employee to see that safety is a part of his work. That to work safely that day ia a part of his regular work program. To avoid accident, because accidents cost money, to work safely, because this saves limbs, lives, suffering and untold mis ery. Mr. Diamond. A midnight lunchHONOR BIRTHDAY eon was aerved. Mrs. William Fricads surprised OBSERVE ANNIVERSARY boma Sr. at her Saturday Harknets. The Kmighta of Pythiaa. Wallace evening in honor of her 73rd birthBEE R. White Lodge. No. 30. net Mon day anniversary. The gueeta In- QUILTING Mn. Robert Ridge was hoatem to day evening for a aocial creainga en- cluded Mrs. Leri Hunt, Mr. and Mrs. tertainment at Cooper! HalL The Ed Hansen. Mr. and Mrs. Harold nine ladies of the W. B. A. Sewing Pythiaa Siatert. the womeai organ Chriatofferaon, Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Club at a quilting be at her boma izatioa of tbe K of P, wen honored Brady, Mr. and Mrs. Gene Singleton, Wednesday, Those present wen Mr. and Mrs. Art Diamond, Mr. and C F. Weatphatt, John Bayes, gactu at the aocial. The aocial h J. W. Brewer, Myrtle Long, Fred annnally in commemontion of tbe fouding of the lodge. Tbe di LEGION AUXILIARY Barton. B. W. Richardson, Eunice Mrs. Lee Golloyer wa hostess to Marlor. Mary Nielson, aad Jack Evvermioa of tbe evening vac card. Thoac p recent were Mr. and Mn. tbe American Legion Auxiliary at bet ans. Luncheon was aerved. A social Tine Hansen, Mr. and Mn. Ed Tern home Thursday evening. in was by 12 participated evening Wallace Williams, er. Mr. and Mn. CARD PARTY Mr. end Mn. Arthar Marih, Mr. guests. Light refreshments were aad Mn. Arthot Lachcsi, Mn. Mar Tbe Knights of Pythias, Wallace garct Patterson, M. J. Brady, Mn. MEET R. White Lodge. No. JO will enterTO CLUB Minnie Cash, Mies Margaret Patterwill Women's Club tain The at a public card party Monday Magna son, Mrs. Vesta Carcase, Archer Hd meet Wednesday evening for their reg- evening, March 28 at Cooper' HalL tier. Joe Sellers. C R. Moyte aad The annual election Refreshment will be aerved end prizular meeting. Tbomae Dtiffd. of officets will be held. All member es awarded. The general public is e e e are invited and urged to attend. invited to attend. QUILTING SOCIAL VVWWWWWWWWNWWAWWWWUWWWWWWWh Tbe Quilting Committee of the the Magas Womens Club met at home of Mrs, Ida Anderson on Main Stmt Monday afternoon. Three quilts were made, two of which will be given to needy people of this viwere: cinity. The ladies present Meedames Frank Peterson, J. R. Jarvis. Carrie Peterson, Sam Myler, T. E. Barks, A. E. Vaughn, Witt Rates, Milton Doxford. W. B. Boucher, and R. Boulaen. Dianer Waa aerved. 'NEWnOUSH HOTEL AU-Ljcpe-aa Mrs. tja. CUh rrliij, IV.rri.7 Another magician Said the traffie eop as he watched the man turn the flivver into a lamp-pos- t. - Rastas, I see your mule has U. S. branded on his hindquarters. Was he in the army! No, host, dat 4U. S. dont stand fob Uncle Sam it means Unsafe. Historically speaking, it is said Venus de MUo is the only instance of plete disarmament ' that com- It's not until a realize depression comes that we that what we had before was People who take pains never to do any more than they get paid for, never get paid for any more than they do. EOOEY - Some one made the remark in our hearing a short time ago, when a comparison of the number of accidents for the past two yean was made, that these figures are just .a lot' of vHooey; that they didnt mean a thing. We wonder! New York. State has just printed, some figures for the year ending June 30, 1931, as follows : - There were 1,241 persons killed in industry in the State for which compensation was paid amounting to $7,768,024.00. There were 61 persons to whom permanent total swards were made to the amount of $854468.00. There were 21,761'permanent partial eases with 965,139 weeks compensation payments awarded to the amount of $17,606,744.00 and 79,983 cases of temporary disability lor which a loss of 547,168 weeks were made at a cost of $9383352.00. Added up, this shows a total of 103,046 accidents, awards of 1,503,-30- 7 weeks ,and compensation, amounting to $36,012,78830. There is no guess work here. These are actual figures compiled from the papers in the esses. The losses sustained by the killed or injured, and their families are not shown. The broken homes, crushed ambitions, de- fsated aim and tragedy strewn in the wake nf these accidents can not be calculated, nor can a money loss be estimated to cover them. Thia is for ONLY ONE STATE. To cover the United States these figures .will have to be multiplied many times. ft |