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Show -PAGE TWO PROVO (UTAH) EVENING HERALD, F R;l DAY; MARCH 4, 1 93 2. SOCIETY Second Ward Old Folks' Benefit Dance Proves Great Success 'Revolutionary' Styles In New Accessories 1 Members of the Second ward over the age of 60 years, and the widows and widowers of the ward were tendered a delightful social affair and banquet .at the amusement amuse-ment hall Thursday. The . national colors and emblems em-blems and large portraits of George Washington, were used In decorating decorat-ing the hall, while red and white carnations were tastefully arranged on the two long banquet tables.. The guests assembled after 10 o'clock, when the following enjoyable enjoy-able program was furnished: Community Com-munity singing, Jed by C. A. Dahl-quist, Dahl-quist, Jr., chairman of the program pro-gram committee; prayer, Joseph Park; address of welcome, C. A. Dahlquist, Jr.; response, Mrs. L. I Nelson: vocal, solo, Mrs. Alene C. Simmons. i Covers were laid for 120 at the banquet, and toasts were given by Vernard Anderson, George Duke, Bishop L. I Nelson and - A. O. Smoot. The afternoon program, included the following: Selection, double mixed quartet from the Provo high school; reading, Miss Helen Spencer; Spen-cer; songs. Parley A.. Water and Jacob I. Jacobsen; duet, Dick Adams and Shirley Taylor; dance specialties, students of Mrs. Orilla Groneman. Beautiful bouquets of sweet peas were presented to William Blake, 84, and "Aunt" Jane Jofces, 90, oldest persons in attendance. . In the evening, members of the old folks' committee and the ward bishopric and their partners gave a social in honor of the following retiring officers of the committee: Mrs. Annie Mlldenhall; Mrs. Maude Peay, Walter Scott, and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Parker. Carnations were presented to the honor guests. A social time was enjoyed and a delicious tray luncheon lunch-eon was served to 32. - One of the largest crowds ever assembled at the Utahna enjoyed the unemployment benefit dance held there Thursday evening. The delightful affair, sponsored by the Provo chamber of commerce, com-merce, proved a decided success both socially and financially. The use of the hail was donated by I J. Eldred and Lee Evans and his Banditti offered their services serv-ices free of charge. Included on the committee on arrangements were J. Edwin Stein, chairman; Walter E. Wiest, Alton J. Anderson, Clyde Clark, Orson Slack, Irvin Slack, E. B. Shriver, Clifford Pie rpont, Starr Deuel, C. T. Larsen, Horatio Jones, Bob Bullock, Bull-ock, Ralph Hayward, Eugene Hansen Han-sen and Walter Whitehead. 'Y" Cesta Ties Enjoy Session An Interesting meeting of the Cesta Ties social unit of the B. Y. TJ. was held at the home of Miss Gertrude Sauer Thursday evening. Miss Leona Gibbons and Miss Helen Cook were the assisting hostesses. Several delightful games were played and tasty refreshments were served . to the following members: Miss Maxlne Clayton, Miss Lola Braithewaite, Miss Helen Decker, Miss May Metta Royal, Miss Madge Crowley, Miss Dorothy Mensel, Miss Fawn Ivins, Miss Zelma Win-terton, Win-terton, Miss Rose Eyring, Miss Uarda Ball, Miss Beth Rich, Miss Alice Spencer, Miss Lorna Murray, Miss Laura Mensel, Miss Olive Winterton, Miss Lorraine Sand-gren, Sand-gren, . Miss Moreho Allred, and guests: Miss Ireta Pierce, Miss Alice Huchins, Miss Pearl Jones, Miss Vesta Wright, Miss Irene Johnson, and Miss Virginia Grant. -I. . ". ' ' Nn.-i - ' , A, - - ; 1 t i s s 4 ' V T K , ' ' v V . V No? :'ak t,'4 V . ;s'r i ! ' , I 3Sfe -MIXING BOW I AJT1 MEREDITH ! Mi Kan Wee Girls V Meet Saturday ! Sixth ward Mi Kan Wee girls will meet at the home of Mary Beth ; Gray Saturday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. I Maeser School In'. ! Patriotic Event DEPRESSION DRESSING I have a letter with some interesting inter-esting ideas on salad dressings that men like (according to the writer). Very fittingly the author calls this French dressing: DEPRESSION DRESSING S tablespoon sugar 1 tablespoon salt 4 tablespoons vinegar 3 tablespoons vegetable salad oil 7 tablespoons water if vinegar is strong 1 clove garlic, crushed, to re lease llavor, or town window-shopping the spring windows. It can be prepared right after breakfast, put in the refrigerator, refrig-erator, ready to be popped Into a hot oven 30 minutes before dinnertime. dinner-time. Have a quantity of boiling salted water ready, put the spaghetti into the kettle and cook at rapid boil for 10 minutes, drain and rinse, then cut across several times with a knift. , Students? of the Maeser v.uj present a six-pari pro; school a m a t the high school auditorium Friday afternoon and evening. The 3X students taking part will be in charge of Miss Ruth lv.s. Mis. i Susa Whltaker and Miss llctta Ritchie. The piojiiam is: "How Betsy 1 small onion, chopped Mix in order listed, let stand i" j sauce over hot water, drop in the refrigerator two hours to develop cut spaghetti and wjtisk the beaten Make the cream sauce and sea- : Made the Flasr". first and second son it to your taste. If the dish is ' grades; "Virsinia Reel." fourth to be prepared ahead of time it will graacs; "Washm-ton's Birthday." be better to grate the cheese, other-l entire cast, sixth grade boys, and wise, iust melt it in the cream . Gordon Billings. Karl Beck. Bud flavor. Pour generously over the shredded lettuce. "It is good over that strange combination, com-bination, oranges diced and onions, chopped, served on lettuce," she says. PAGE MRS. POST "It may not be proper, but I al- egg yolks through it. Butter a casserole and line it with slices of ham. Arrange the mixed spaghetti in the casserole, then take what Jiam is left, cut the slices in half and carefully insert th3in on a slant across the top of the dish (you know what the apples look like on the top of apple Jensen. Arnold Chapman arid h's schoolmates: tableau, cast: "Bert Bench. Arnold Chapman. Philip Peiiman. Mildred Snyder. Chester West. Farley Johnson. Kimball Peterson, Elmo Hope. Mark Andei-sois, Andei-sois, Hay Kreliickson. l,eo Perry, and the entile sixth giade. The last four parts of the program pro-gram are tableaux depicting - the life of Washington. ways serve Thin Dressing Salads' cake? That's how the ham must ; in small shallow cereal bowls in stead of salad plates, as every one seems to like to 'finish up all of that generous serving of Thin Dressing with a 'spoon afterwards. I'm sure Mrs. Post wouldn't approve!'' ap-prove!'' Whether or not Mrs. Post would approve will be discussed later. Accessories adroitly pay homage to the Washington bi-centennlal this spring by reflecting a Colonial inspiration. Steel buckles appear aa one of the smartest trimmings for pumps, and belts of leather. A chic bag and belt of patent leather have a modern version of a simple Colonial steel buckle; a classic opera pump uses a cut steel buckle with a colored backing to match the frock with which it is worn; a tongue pump, with a distinct dis-tinct Colonial flavor, heightens its period design of using a square cut steel buckle for. decotation. Your Children By Olive Roberts-Barton g)W5 BY NEA SERVES INC.- Club Calendar CHILDREN'S SHOES 75 pair, size 6 to 2, in tan and c black, patent or calf Oxfords. J Regular values to $2.95 BOYS' SHOES Oxfords and high shoos of ' sturdy elk or calfskin. Solid leather shoes. Regular values r to $2.95, Sizes G to 2 All over the United States trees are being planted to commemorate the two hundredth anniversary of the birth of George Washington and in almost all cases school chil dren are actively interested in the ; awarded and luncheon served work. II. D. BRIDGE Members of the H. D. club will be the guests Wendell Bradford Saturda noon at her home. Bridce will be played TODAY'S RECIPK SPAGHETTI-HAM MOULD 1 package spaghetti 1 cup diced yellow cheese cups cream sauce, seasoned with grated onion, parsley, Halt and pepper 2 egg yolks, well beaten V pound thinly sliced cooked ham This convenient dish could be the main dish for your busy day, or, j for the day you plan to spend down- be placed.) Dust with pepper and a little .grated cheese, and bake 30 minutes in a medium oven. The cream sauce"should be thin . rather than thick if the dish is to be cf delicate texture. I think a gcod salad to serve with this rich disn would be the onion and orange salad suggested in the ; opening paragraph, with the Dft- ! pression Dressing. One cooked vegetable would be the other re- ! quirement and for dessert, why not j baked cup custards, served hot? I The calories amount to 2425, and the dish will serve four. Recent costly fires have caused a strict ban on smoking on all of London's docks. E Rome crime. has a new museum of r Bridge j f Mrs. after- prizes BOYS' SHIRTS, 2 for "Boy Pine" Shirt also Blouses! New lore r"nt collars! Plain colored broadcloth; broad-cloth; printed broadcloth or madras. S27C P tO 14,S . . BOYS' KNICKERS e Worsted cuff models of all-wool fab- ( rics. High waistbands; extra large, t heavy drill pockets. 9 to 14 .. Full lined. Sizes Children's Stockings, Cine ribbed, lone staple -cotton In 'ckirabto colon 15c Each or 7 Pair 1 Chiffon 'Silk HOSE Every pair perfect and full-fashioned Woven of high-twist Milk; sheer, dull, strong; Ire-i heels, plcot tops French seams, llegular f L50 values Boys' Wool IE --Collegiate XCut Style --Sizes 8 to 16 "Wide English legs with i caff bottoms! Bar-tacked at every ' point of strain! High Extension IValst-: IValst-: band! : Greys and taiurf. - New Spring Shades! r "yJi Men's Fine Press HIR1S -"Sanforized'', or Pre-ShrunkV Shirts Broadcloth or madras i stripe! ' Guaranteed fast color! Sizes .14 to 171. Full Cut! ;MEN'S PAJAMAS Flue count plain or printed broad- t cloths. - Donrees and sateens. 'New .v spring styles and : colors guaranteed fart colored! B to D. '. .V. BOYS' SWEATERS Wool '. sweaters with large athletic armholcsv . Kcinforced shoulders and necks. ' Plain colors In sties 16 to 34. ........ Tradeat ERCANBRAGK'S For Your- DoUar's .Sake. In Bennington, Vermont, five miles of English elms are being set out this' year in honor of the memory of the Father of Our Country. The southland, periect at this time of year for tree planting, is very busy. Six hundred high school pupils in Jacksonville, Fla., have set out one thousand forest trees along a country highway. Other school children in other, cities' are nbt only cooperating, uv the purchase of young saplings, but are actually engaged in planting plant-ing them by the thousands. Many of the states are furnishing furnish-ing the .memorial plates or tags-free tags-free of charge and are helping in other ways with the work in this "February until Thanksgiving" festival. A Fitting Memorial Could anything be more fitting or magnificent than this tree-planting tree-planting program? George .Washington .Wash-ington was a lover of trees and some of the monarchs at Mount Vernon still stand that were there when the soldier and statesman had turned his sword to a plowshare plow-share and retired to spend his declining de-clining years on his Virginia estate. Ajp spring approaches our northern north-ern territories, great plans are under way for similar memorials. As in Vermont, many communities communi-ties have already begm the work. The American Tree' association' is going to have a busy summer, I am sure. I have been thinking that one good way to commemorate Washington's Wash-ington's birthday in schools is to tell the children about his ability as a naturalist, as well as that of a soldier and a statesman. Have you ever been to Mount Vernon where George and Martha Washington are buried? They are not buried really, but lie in open tombs of simple stone sarcophagi where the shade of forest trees falls over them. If they were alive , they could stand and gaze down a gently sloping hillside to the beautiful Potomac they both loved so well. A Lover of the Land 7 Washington loved the land and everything it bore. Recently we drove through Fredricksburg, Va.. near where he was born, and many of the old trees under which he played as a boy are 'still there in the grand old town. " As a very young1 man he -was sent on a hazardous errand to the commander of the English forces west of. the Pennsylvania mountains. moun-tains. Also as a surveyor went out into that wilderness. That took courage. If you have crossed" those, mountains on a smooth pavetH highway, have you ever tried to conceive what it meant to blaze trails through virgin forest and wilderness thick with Indians,, and where to be lost meant death? I think that sometimes we overemphasize over-emphasize Washington's ' political and martial .career, and say too little : about the brave young; fellow fel-low whose experiences would make an astounding volume were - they all known. ' -i" At any rate, it Is ; a fitting gesture ges-ture to commemorate his birth by planting trees end It won't be long now until spring.' ' r VAL QUINCO MUs Shirley Weight will be hostess host-ess to members of the Val Quinco club Saturday evening at her home. PANDORA :A bridge-luncheon will be tendered tend-ered members of the Pandora club Sunday afternoon at the residence of Miss LaRee Chlpman in American Amer-ican York. & E. R CLUB Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Greer will entertain members of the Saturday Evening Bridge club at their home Saturday. ... Shanghai, prior to recent war -cu1e. -"as considered "Paris of the East." ORPHEUM TONIGHT and SATURDAY jA-t woman .-coaches a football team In Hawaii, -. - -jf. -v etaUiaVnM, Smm vttfe &btt 4 1 r She could lick her weight in ivildcatsand SHE FEARED NO MAN! female tornado who made the West bad for bad-men. bad-men. But her woman's heart betrays her! CAUGHT! i Paramount Pictw starring. Richard Arlen ' ' nith .... LOUISE DRESSER -FRANCES DEE Special Added Shorts "SULTAN'S CAT ANIMAL WORIJJ JIAKE BELLEVE" LAST TIME TODAY! ANN HARDING -in- -with- Adolph Menjou SUNDAY "MONKEY BUSINESS" FREE ! SlfAVlS with Every Hair Cut FINGER WAVE with Lady's Hair - Cut ; Children's Hair Cut3r 25C.L; JL, V " . ELBIO LOVEREDGE ICS So. 1 West - Fhone 1159 .. SATURDAY Only The Strangest Love Crime That Krer Burned the Headlines! WHOSE LIPS KISSED HER? WHOSE HANDS KILLED HER? "THE SDH DENT WDTNESS With The Noted "Stage Star LIONEL ATWILL GBETA N1SSEN BRAMWELL FI.KTc'HFR -:- ADDED -:-"BIG EARS" Our Gang Comedy "QUIT YOUR KICKING 3 ' O i 5 AT 1 i'i' U NEWS REEL ! ' I , ' f " f 'Z "''4 I fife Xmm'-iL NLt 'JM - ' 1 V :? 'Aw 1$' I' , '' WmsiSUNDA Yft&& 0r in Var-Torn-ChinaPal Right' in Today's. Battle N' i Zoiies Red Romance and )f Black Tragedy! And What a OLIVE BROOK WARNER OLAND - - i "nr W W. mm - I i 1 j ' - I ' A Paramount Picture A Picture as timely an . To-y's Newspaper Headlines Masterful Cast! ANNA WAY WONG EUGENE PALLET mm ' -r-"""-" 1 "-"S Today and Saturday not His arms... NOR HIS MEN... NOR HIS RIFLES. COULD TAME HER of, ra fl n lVtill DOIORES DEL RIG LEO CARMllO NORMAN FOSTER HERBERT BRENON'S DRAMATIZATION OF V1LLAR0 . .MACK'S SENSATIONAL STAGE HIT 'THE " DOVE' RKO RADIO PICTURC MMSaasaBMBaaSBMWMMMnBBMaMBIMBMBHV Battling With Buffalo Bill Mickey Mouse in "CACTUS KID" Comedy Hoi'' Gems of M-G-M STARTS SUNDAY JOAN ItONDIU. MADOI IVANS UNITID ARTISTS PICTURf Every film magazine gives this picture golden, stars. COMING SOON "AR0UNfX$e WORCb QOHIMUTES DflSOLASfifAlRBAMKS i m JOC- c. He' A RIOT! IN: .;(.. 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