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Show Some Good Points in Meal Planning SHOWS MONKEYS CAN ' GRIEF OF MOTHER STARTS INDUSTRY LEARN TO JUDGE TIME fooil materials). Serve different foods in the moals of the day or week rather than a great variety In each meal. New dishes beget new appetites why not surprise the family once in a while with a new dish. The subjoct of "MpiiI rroparu tlou" was discussed before Hie 15. Mother' eliiss of 'J'aylorKvillc Wiinl by Miss Ktith Uees of the Iomenlic Siience I rt meiil of tin; l'lyiiioiiih School, Tuesday evening. The centered around Hie followUTAH BRIEFS ing points. I'tah canneries packed H.IIiil.il.'!" food 1. Include some of ouch or diiy's cases products, in V.i'SI. stuff In ench men nienls. I'lnn (specially to inigden - Sportsmen give labor ' fools. build trout ponds at Spring Creek. clude the protective whole milk, frnitts, nnd vego-ti- t Roosevelt Park open Victory Ides. April L'l for season of ItlgH. 2. A well rounded meal usualiv linden building permits for March consists of one meat or meat reach $l!71,:H). vegesubstitute, one starchy Itoniled warehouse is Hgden table, one leafy vegetable, bread opened at Western (lateway Storund butter and a sweet food. A age plant. salad or relish may be added. I'rovo City buys $,"i",0tMt Nation3. Do not repeat one kind of food al Pump Co. plant for .l7,.riiMi, for In the same nieiil: for exuinpl", garage and jail. tomato soup and tomato salad; for Slate road disbursements find cold ereanicd .cabbagii March ?17s.(7-ltotaled slaw; mashed potatoes and poCisco section Wbitehouse tato salad. of Junction l'rlce (Iriuid highway Is one type of 4. Avoid using all lliiishcd. foodstuff in one meal, such as Itiighum City I.ihkI persons at excss .Larch potato soup, armory. boiled potatoes, steamed rice, lend dedication of .f."i0.iMH I lull bread and corn - starch pudding, Altlomoblle Association ofor excess protein asbeef soup, fers ,i'i,."i(Ki prizes for belter- - highsalad and way essays. fcfeak, cheese, egg custa rd. Cache Valley I.ognn - rrojiosed 5. Io not serve more than .strong general hospital will cost .$.", k h J. llavored food in one meal, onCoalville - Calderwood Investment ions, cabbage, turnips, sardines, Co. will raise several thousand turami salted fish. If one of these key. strong flu voreil foods Is used, I'tah Poultry I'roducers Cooperathe rest of the menu must be tive Association, will sliip under built around this llavor. name of ".Milk White Eggs." no 0. Certain llnvors naturally - I'avis Itouniiful County high together, as apples with pork, $ . school and Houndhave lo tomatoes with veal, cranberries $2.s,lMM), fill high building junior with poultry, mint with lamb. fund. combine Kkc ii ml cheese dishes Ma nl i -- County egg grading pla.it well with most vogothlos. esIs running tocapacity, L1H eases a pecially peas, aspargus, ctHcry. cauliflower, potatoes, turnips, to- week. Sal inn Produce association here' matoes and onions. i between signing up luo ai res cert lied jMitato 7. Have a piod balance soft ami solid foods. A meal of planting. Mutitl - (liiMiouiids isiisoned gram soup, ( .'earned meat, scalloped distributed throughout colli) . is being and soft iiistard vegetal in effort to reduce ravages of a try Likewise meal far too watery. of baked meet, boiled potatoes, ground siiiirrel. Hiigliiiiu City I.. C. doing build-- : sanli .1 vegetables, and steamed Hiiillry house to replace one large pudding is Intolerably dry. In burned. not have one should one course C. M. I. buys Salt Lake City- -. two foisls prepared in the same J.H.tHMI addition to plant site. way. Cache County Iry Farm (Jraee of foods 8. Serve contrasting rower plant ''.",oi grape vines. same Itoast in the flavors meal, I'lah cement plants b;ie Three baked mashed meat, potatoes, itiesleil. and employ tomatoes and fruit same make jri.lNMi.iMNi men. it more npiolizing meat tliali nearly I'"' Cedar Clly Is designated for new Is iled ineill. billed l'tatoeS. corn and bread pudding, fede.nl building. I '.ui, kit Work l ogins on Kureka-Noit'.I 1'oikis should not ho ail mid l hlghvta.v. ily A' ids sharpen lior nil sweet. , I'llliuote Old slate eapitol being and should Ihetv- Hie mnn-- Columbus, Ohio. Two little monkeys, whose names for publication are abbreviated to A und lt have usslsted lc-i- 1 1 t III-- u psychologist to demonstrate, ihut monkeys tan judge time. They have also hhovvu thut If they are typical examples of their kind the feminine monkey has u little better sens-- of lime than the masculine. The two monkeys leurued not to reach for u piece of bnnuna displayed In a tin can when a sound hammer measured off a tecond and u half Interval Just before the can was shown. And they leunied to take the bnnanu out of the cuu when four und a half seconds were sounded off Just before the food appeared. Dr. Herbert Woodrow of the University of Oklahoma, who reported tills experiment before the American Psychological association, said that after I!,00 trials the female monkey, A, responded correctly In 02.5 i er cent of Instances, and after 3.GO0 trials monkey I', the male, made n record of !K per cent. The experiment was conducted for a short time each day for more than a month. Scolded Into Knowledge. The monkeys were discouraged from making the wrong response chiefly by scolding and being told After "No," Doctor Woodrow said. about live days monkey A began to bat with her paw on the screen which covered the can while the time Interval was sounded. This batting, Doctor Woodrow stated, was quite irregular, but It developed Into a or habit, so that she batted oiU-"twice during the shorter Interval and much oftener during the longer Interval. As a result of being scolded when she reached for the food nt the wrong time this monkey developed a vacillating type of behavior, reaching out and fingering the rim of the ciui even when she finally decided correctly not to try to take the banana. Monkey P, toward the last days of the experiment, began to pull at the brown felt on which the food can rested, ami after that pulling at the felt became Ids regular procedure. If the correct response was to take the food be would pull at the felt and then quickly seize the bnnuna and eat It. If the signal was net to take It be would pull at the felt and then rest bis paws on the bars of the cage. New Test for Spellers. The ebl fashioned spelling bee at which supremacy In spelling was fought over nnd proved by roe) Ins out words can now be replaced by a much simpler ordeal. A new sclent ilic test to measure spelling ability devised by Dr. J. E. W. Wnllin of Miami university was before the association. A child wiin possesses marked spelling ability ought to be able to ,.t.,.,.i.(i.. of 1neroninp e , m m e ' - ' V NUIONVI. .I0LI to figure what It is impossible Muscle ShoaN has cost the taxpavTown w and Take Up Weaving Few persons know just kicked been Is Now Famous. limx veal's i, has ;.,ro"'mi Congress. If anyone tried which the paid Relriz, Portugal. A broken-hearte,).,,,. ,;p the lime tl people ill mother is responsible for bringing an s, ' f !be A Mii'i'i' remote " to this new industry entirely House of Kopresclitallve village of the Douro province. Imve w:l,te Senate Four years ago the young wife ot ,l,e slion. !he vah.e of the lost time a farmer here lost tier omy I'"."""11 against he bum' child. To take her thoughts away ,hu',-.tistorpdii g. would from her grief she took up M'i-c- o .',,Her nimble fingers worked po!i!ial purposes ;l so fast in their race to keep ahead Shoals has Im en :i agiom-it me been in reality of her sad thought!? that she m,iim issue, when quite proficient and finally took on ; power project ot Miliary js( six apprentices to help her. built to many which are The carpets they produced were so Mnnhir companies private successful that the industry expanded ;.,,! operated by Fnited Stales. und their Utile home workshop has !j,U over the Musrle Shoals is a typical become a factory with otxi women emof what happens to an ployees, besides scores of others emf"r In which becomes hogged in th" minor Jobs and training ployed admission In a second factory which ,pu.gmire of polities - the taxpayand pris will open soon. ers lose, the country Ttie harmonious, delicate coloring discouraged is vate development and the intricate patterns of the l'.ei-rl- z aial detriment resulting with carpets already has made them Heeled. n to territory well known In other countries. The wool used in their fabrication Is obtained from the flocks of the HOW TO MKKT Portuguese Serras. All raw material Is Portuguese, so that the industry is a genuinely national one. positions The carpet industry is bringing Officials in prosperity to districts surrounding i stale, federal, cifv. county and Hclriz. The women who a few years uovcrnmeiits cmid help great ago worked nil day in the fields with up business ,epresion their menfolk for a precarious liveli- j- in taking during a presihood now live in comfort nt home em- an nneiuploviueiii t.y speeding up plans ployed In weaving and spinning the iential c,',r Private corporawork. wool for the carpets at the factories, puhii,. which sell as fast as they are made. tions could also impnwe the general SUNDAY & MONDAY, April triple-Jointe- 22-2- 3 IN ,i-s- Scientist Tells of Interesting Experiment 1 m 19, 1928 APRIL THE MURRAY EAGLE. THURSDAY, SPORTINp , ,,. A MALCOLM ST CUIIV. 0.O O V CT I U IS well-to-d- carpet-makin- l ex-,,!- lo-e- P A IV A Grandmother Proud of Work in Night School provement pushing programs biles and love. He was stalled on the desert but he keeps the laughs hitting on eight cylinders. When he changes from flivver to Rolls, the fun whizzes on high. NEWSREEL in times TUES. & WED., April KapBrooklyn, N. 1'. Mrs. lan could not understand what the fuss was about, and her dark eyes snupped with mystification nml a trace of anger. She was a grandmother, yes, with 13 grandchildren, and she was probably the only grandmotli-er- , sixty years old, attending the public evening schools In the city of New York. What of It? "Me? Too old? Why, 1 learn Just as well as when I was younger." she said. To prove It, she drew forth a black notebook and showed the long had written there. English words Mrs. Kaplan came to American from Poland about u year ago. First of till, she says, she went to the synagogue , IP.e in consumption--mor- e g and after a while she sought cut a being are mail-ethan t the on public school. She lias never seen a sorbed and iiiiemi!oni.iil. somebut she moving picture, may. 24-2- 5 ''Oft? CAM. LAEMMlE ADOREf' CURWOODS greatest story UAMES OLIVER ft. 1- - fc.iM A o--sJ Universal Picture 3 of slackness. work Such timing of development I both private enterprise an ,v would lend to stabiiic , minimize litiemph.y-,ami usiness election year , j presidential of All sources liUe the present. be tapshould emplovmcnt l.v those in authority against , ,,.,iom y to hold bit k until after thus and ,he November election unemployment. prevent unneessnry mainFull prosperity depends on of power taining purchasing lii.an.ed by maintaining and a high standard f wages :,,,,! dlixiic'. Fneiuplov ti eiit means Me-lli- COMEDY im- larded by , Pvy; He Wins a Prize but not for selling suits. A comedy salesman in a funny farce of golf and business, automo- (. situation PICTU MOUNT - p,r. N ab- ' She Faced A Thousand Deaths that one might live Her happiness hung by the slender thread of chance-- yet she braved the scorn of the one she loved. It's a picture of the wild, tremendous, glamorous free country where man is a law unto himself and man's love for woman is elemental, passionate and fierce, with a woman playing the big part he-fn- an Gem Theatre (A Murray Institution) time. According to Ignus O. Hornsteln, Never explain. If it isn't principal of evening school 1,'ti, and it's foolish: ami if " i" Miss (lira Konioroff, Mrs. Kaplan's it doi'sti t lo'tp maneis. teacher, there Is no more conscientious sary. student In the evening school than the grandmother who three nights a I K SAI.K week trudges up three flights of stairs and seats herself up In the front row l.aiulaii Sedan. ", V, (heMolcl of the classroom, pencil In hand nnJ notebook In readiness. lit. v bumpers, irud;. tnotoineler. miles. P. r. onlv rim T.'i "c A- -l - i r ' Cleaning & Dying Co. Clean Clothes m v.yv; i.nnk WELL! |