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Show OREM-GENEVA TIMES THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1950 A A I 1 1 -""I 1 KJs J CI HEART-SHAPED CAKE PANS AT OUR STOZS get Yon on:zi acre H0 cay mim 752 By SPECIAL I I iA THIS WEEK I These items and prices are typical of the better values you will find in our store every day of the week. DIXIE NO. 1 TALL CAN A Favorite for a Wide Variety of Dishes PlCTjlTZST PEAS Pkg. 23c BEANS Pkg.23c Strawberries Pkg. 35c CAMPBELL'S Soup Chicken; and Beef Varieties 15 40 FATHOMS PLUMP, FRESH COVE OYSTERS r) Q CEiACKEnO SWANSON'S Margarine 11) 29 NABISCO Crisp and Delicious lb. 25 r TRY THIS n PRIZE flIMG U RECIPE 0 M-J-B f.ijC Coffd0 1 lb. 79 From Pilisbury's 100,000 Recipe & Baking Contest STEWING HENS LB 27(S PORK ROASTS 3Q4 WSWsw', 1 U Iiut,ts 0T I ..in". t: -iii - GERBER'S Gaby Food e 45 SWIFT'S SELECT POT ROAST GRADE A HAMS wh.fe.rM lb. QVU 5IKLUIII5IEAKS " lb. 5Q2 SWIFT'S SELECT 7 Green Onions Radishes 2BU. ONIONS Yellow, Firm. Mature NO. 1 3 LBS. r U. S. NO. 1 RED BLISS IV. TOMATOES Full Flavored and Good CARTON m YOU'LL FIND OUR FRUITS AND VEGETABLES THE TOP QUALITY AT LOWEST PRICES J GRAPEFRUIT NO. 1 Sweet, Whites LB. POTATOES -irJWCfy Carrots 15 Cabbage 5 Colory 9 proccoli zsu 17 LEMOIIS sFTNKcf POTATOES 1,01 HL 45$ APPLES 415 YAMS LARGE, JUICY NAVEI ORANGES to CASE LB. (b 1ICIH OF THE HEEX BAKE at 325 F. (or 45 to 55 minutes. MAKES om 8 x 8 x 2-Inch cake Sift togethtv l cup sifted Pillibory' Bnt Enriched Flour H teaspoon $odl H teaspoon Sift .. H cup buttBf (half shortening may be used). Add gradually gradu-ally 1 cup firmly packed browa Sugar, creaming well. ...SlS I H squares aH oi.) ehocaiiti, melted and cooled. M ix well. . H cup sour milk or buttermilk. Add alternately with dry ingredients in-gredients to creamed mixture, mix-ture, beating thoroughly after each addition. . H cup finely chopped nut nettl H cup shredded coconut 1 teaspoon vanilla .. .into greased and floured 8x 8x2-inch pan. like in moderate oven (326 for 48 to 5$ minutes. If desired, this recipe may be doubled and baited in a 10xH2'Uich pan for 1 hour. The frosting recipa may also be doubled. CrtM AM . MMSiirg.. Blend ia. Pour Banana Nut Dread Broadeattt January 21, 1950 2 cups sifted alt. 1 wU-betea age puiposa dour 1 cap meshed, tYt teespoam np bansns balmc powda (i mtdtum alt Vi cup P Milk i cod sucac Yt cud malted Y2 cup Bsaiy ca asata asnctatuaa; Greeu wll a. lV4-qt. loaf pan. Sift Sour with baking powder, salt and sugar. Fold in nuts. Mis remaining ingredienta. Add all at oncd to flour, nixing quickly but thoroughly. Put into greaied pan. Bale in moderately elow OTea (350 F.) about JO min., or until bread shrink from (idea of pan. Let gtand in pan 9 min. before turning turn-ing out. Cool on wire rack. sVTo mash banana, peel, slice and peat smooth with rotary beater. You Will AW; SEGOMILK ao a 4 Cans HT I FUDGE-MALLOW FROSTING 1 I Melt 1 aquiur (I ot.) chocolate and 2 table. I poona buttaa- over hot water. Add chocolate choco-late mixture to 2 cupa sifted confexrtionexa1 1 Iaufar. Blend In 1 teaspoon vaiulia and to i 3 Ubleapoona cream until frosting it of proper spreading consistency. Add 6 marah-mailowa, marah-mailowa, cut into eighths. Spread on cooled cak' Entered by Mrs. Albert G. Plagens, St. Paul, Minn. One 9 the 100 winners! All recipes won with Pilisbury's Best they require Pilisbury's Best in your kitchen Pilisbury's BEST FLOUR 45c S lb. sack PlabuiT'l .1e BANANAS LB. 16? SOFTASILK CAKE FLOUR PKG. 37 FREE TO OUR CUSTOMERS! The 3 Grand Prize-winning recipes in the Pillsbury $100,000 Grand National Baking Contest Pilisbury's $50,000.00 No Knead Water Rising Twists $10,000.00 k Starlight Mint Surprise Cookies $4,000.00 Aunt Carrie's Bon Bon Cake HI Ploaty cS Ferae ParfsEsiG Open 7 Boys a Vooi o a.ra. 20 .m. County GOP Sets Dates For Conventions SCERA CHATTER Utah county Repulicans will hold their county-wide orgamz ation meeting on Feb. 25 and their nominating convention on May 6, it was annouced this eek by Phillip V. Christenson. county GOP chairman. Mass meetings in each of the i county's 109 voting ditsricts are scheduled by Republicans for Feb. 2, at which district officers will be named to attend the county coun-ty organization meeting on Feb. 25. Delegates for the nominating convention Will be apportioned on the basis of one for each 25 votes cast in the district in 1948 for GOP ex-congressman W. A. Dawson. There will be about 550 delegates eligible to attend the county convention from all districts. dis-tricts. At the Feb. 25 organizing convention, con-vention, county GOP officers will be chosen. Chairman Chris tenson announces that he will not be a candidate for re-election this year. Other county officers are Mildred Ream, Spanish Fork, (vice chairman; Jack Swenson, Spanish Fork, secretary; and iLoyd Whitlock, Provo, treasure-Also at the Feb. 25 convention, convent-ion, 122 Utah county delegates will be named to represent the part at the state GOP convent- lions during the year. This year he county will have more dele gates at the state convention I than any other county except (sait Lake. Candidates for county polit-I polit-I ical offices will be nominated at ! the county convention on May :6, Nine county offices will be at I stake, with Republicans holding seven now. Commissioner Reed J. Knud-sen, Knud-sen, county clerk Verl Dixon, county auditor Karl Bennett, county assessor J. Austin Cope ?r., ; county treasurer Maurice Bird, county recorder Mildred Ream, county engineer Hugo GROVE Fri., Sai. Jan. 20 - 21 "Everybody,-Does It" Sun., Mon. Jan. 22 - 23 Matinee on Sunday 3 p.m. The Fighting Kentuckian Tues-, Wed. Jan. 24 25 "House of Strangers" Monday, Tuesday and Wed ' mesday of next week t show on the screen anoth& comedy called EVERYBODY DOm IT starring Linda Darnell, Paul Douglas and Celeste Holms. Would you hl to know what everybody does? Come and see the pict. ure, perhaps you will want to do it too. We have all missed Ina Skis ner as cashier the last two weeks. She was a patient at tht Utah Valley Hospital for an in. pendicilis operation. She left us she will be back next weak Mrs. Sharee Balser has beet appointed as cashier. Everywhere the picture Mv FRIEND IRMA has played in tt, United States or Canada houses have been packed to oyer flowing. You won't wonder whj when vou see this funniest o! pictures. Everybidy likes a good laugh. The picture plays foninhi (Friday) and Saturday night. 1 f We would like to introduce to you this week OUr llshniv We feel they are the finest giri tnai any tneatre can boast ni Next time you come, pay panic uar attention and you will agr with us. They are: Yolanda Voorhees, Carol Swan, Joy Han cock, Elaine Anderberg, Jean Macdonald, Carol Reese, Shirley nowiana, jeanneue Abraham, Geralee Swan, Norma Wagstaff, Nita Doman, Jean Ray, Eileen Lemond, Georgia Rudd, Ruth Moss, Carol Watts, Dora Prest-wich Prest-wich and Ida Lou Davis. For the Saturday afternoon kids matinee, we bring Ibj week Gene Autry in that de-; lightful.. picture.. PUBLIC COWBOY NUMBER ONE, as well as four cartoons and; the serial "Adventures of Wild 1 Bill Hickok." The interesting and informal. ive display now being shown in ine lobby ot the Scera Theatre was arranged by Charles Hal-ford, Hal-ford, local commercial artist. Sqt. Bruce Newman in charqe of the Marine Recruifinn Offir. at Provo furnished the maierali and assisted in the arrangement It will be worth vour while to see it. Price, sheriff Theron S. Hall and county attorney Arnold Roy- lance are those whose office expire next fall. i Individual districts unable to hold mass meetines on Feb. 2 are asked to notify Mr. Christen son this week. ' i Expert Way to Sow Seed Easy for Amateur to Copy y , it? w n baf' " " M ' l! No. 1 Sow seed thinly in shallow drills. No. 2 Cover lightly with i sifted, porous soil. No. 3 When leaves develop, transplant seedlings t second flat. No. 4 When plants are ready, move them into pots. ! Have you ever wondered how flor ists grow those stocky pot plants of petunias, marigolds, and many oth er lovely annual flowers which they seu in tne early spring? Professional methods enable ev ery live seed in a packet to produce a salable plant; and one man, or boy, to start hundreds of plants each working day, without undue strain on mind or muscle. Of course you must have a ereen- nouse, m order to start the plants as early as florists do. and brina them to flowering size as soon as it is safe to move them to the garden. But their method is worth knowing, even though you start seeds two or three weeks later in a hot bed, cold frame, or south window of your house. First, seed is sown broadcast or In shallow drills (trenches) in a flat (shallow box) which has been filled with porous soil. This you can prepare pre-pare by muting one-third peat, one-third one-third sharp builder's sand, and one-third one-third of your best garden top soil, sifted. See No. 1 in the accompanying accompany-ing illustrations. Cover the seed lightly with the same soil, sifted through an ordinary ordi-nary kitchen sieve as shown in No. 2. Firm the soil gently, soak it with water by standing in a tub, so the water soaks up from the bottom, and the seeds are not disturbed. Put In a dark, but well ventUated j place until the seeds sprout, then bring it into all the light you can supply. i When the seedling plants have developed de-veloped their first leaves, transplant them to another flat, spacing them two inches apart each way. At this I early stage transplanting shock i at a minimum, and the tiny seedlings seed-lings are easily lifted with roots intact in-tact using a pointed stick, or pocket-knife blade. Pegs fastened in 8 , board the same size as the flat, enable en-able all the holes required for the ; transplants to be made at once, properly spaced. Sometimes instead in-stead of pegs, holes are drilled in , this board, through which a pointed stick can be passed to mark places for the transplants. The roots are dropped into the prepared hole (No. 3), and soil pressed against them in one sec ond. When the flat is filled, return to its place in the sun all the sun you , can give it until the seedlings hava developed several pairs of leave and are ready to be potted. I Potting is quickly done, placing f each seedling in the pot and fuUne f in soil around it. leavine space at j the top for watering. Pots may b s of clay, 2 to 4-inch, depending on ; the size of the plant wanted; or pa- I per pots or plant bands may s used. Avoid using a pot so small , that the plant will receive a check j in growth before safe to move to t the garden. i |