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Show Lovely Gifts At Shower A bridal shower was given by a Croup or mends at the home or Mrs. - 8. C Adams, in honor of Mrs. James C. Campbell. (Pvt. Helen Demos Campbell of the WACs) who Is here vis tine her mother. Mrs. Thomas E. Demos. Pvt. Campbell Is to report back 10 Lake Charles. La. Her husband. Sgt. Campbell., who accompanied Ur sen, uas murnco o aum r .field Calif. if Hostesses for the party were k w lfM V -1 Bt V - fs Duke, Mrs. Dewey Johnson; Mrs. Earl Conder, Mrs. Marie Bennett and Mrs. Adams. Two violin solos were played by Miss Deanne Merrill, accom panied by Miss Betty Nicholes and a dance was furnished by Miss Mary Stevenson, with Mrs. Dickson at the piano. Delicious refreshments were served to 40 guests. Beautiful gifts were pre sented to the honoree. Salt Lake Couple Entertained Here A breakfast was given by Mr, and Mrs. Hugo Price in the gard- en at their home, to honor Mr. and k.Mrs, Ray H. Briggs of Salt Lake City, who are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. E- D. Firm- ge. Guests included the Firmages, also, Mr. and Mrs. John Schofield, Mrs. Arnold Rawllngs, Mr. and if m TTn rl Thrnmaa anrf Tla Ufarl. fJyn Price. Sweet peas and baby breath were combined in decorating the Creakl ast table. Son Home From Mission; Honored Mrs. Golden Taylor and daugh ter. Mrs. Vivienne Creer enter tained at dinner Tuesday evening for their son and brother, Noel M. fTaylor, who Just returned from mission in the Hawaiian Is lands. Also honored were Mrs. Fred S. Johnson, wife of Major Johnson, John-son, with the army air corps overseas, ov-erseas, and Mrs. Sherwin G. Taylor, Tayl-or, (Margie Spaulding) who left Tuesday night to join her nus-band nus-band in Corsicana, Texas. Mrs. Johnson is visiting at the home of Mrs. Creer for a fortnight. fort-night. Timpanogos AHA Sets Canyon fete A canyon party is being held by the Timpanogos ward M. I. A. Thursday evening, members to meet at the church grounds at 8:30 o'clock. Transportation will be provided and friends are invited in-vited to join the group. Watermelons will be furnished by the Mutual, and each person Will provide picnic. Softball, com peteUve games and other features of entertainment will provide amusement. The tank that can swim is known officially as the LVT (Landing Vehicle Tracked), and to the men of the South Pacific as the "water buffalo." Advance Reviews Put Capes In Limelight ana m""'mmmmmmmmmmmmmmtm i "f s J ! , 'i jK. s ' V v f" ' ' J ff'f , .. . J j."! - , - f - . - f ' S Ml C I ! f L )' '4 m Ml f wv v i - . C":ja'a"- ii i I in i i i' -i f By EPSIE KINABD MEA Staff Writer . NEW YORK Because there is something about a cape that brings out the actress In a woman wom-an youll see plenty of these dramatic dra-matic styles in fall and winter fashions. That style Is the jaunty elbow-length elbow-length capelet of fur or fabric or a combination "of both but you'll see it more often as the matching unit of a suit from which It can be detached and used as a toss-cn wrap to serve many wardrobe uses for early fall. Typical of this fashion is . the capelet starred in the four-piece outfit shown at the left designed by Ben Reig and launched in his fall collection. Under the detachable collared capelet is a low neckline of matching match-ing red and black checked wool and a red crepe blouse. Representing the other extreme of this fashion is th great-lady cape ensemble intended to bring out .the actress in you either when worn with its own suit with the blouse and skirt of that suit; or with other companions picked at random from your wardrobe. Such versatility is offered in the Hattie Carnegie-designed ensemble shown at the right a three-piece outfit of gold woodpecker check wool Including a tailored suit a blouse and a gracefully cut cape. .,M, ..nu ..ii).,l, -T- "I V 14 v j: "Tf IBS sfcillMiTiMr H iHI CaSMSfWSaff.- Miti a' 1ft hrfSaiftWw1rtStl Club Calendar IS EDGEMOXT LITERARY Mrs. Tana Richards will be hostess to the Edgemont Literary club Friday at 2 o clock at her home. Mrs. Rachael Mecham will give a book review. 4-C Mrs. Ned Cameron will enter tain at her home Thursday eve ning for members of the 4-C club. JOCOSE Lunch will be served promptly at .7:30 o'clock to Jocose club members Friday evening at the home cf Mrs. Elwood Bywater A theater party will follow. FOUNTAIN GREEN LADIES All women who formerly resid ed in Fountain Green, Utah, are Invited to be guests of the Foun tain Green Ladies' club Friday at Pioneer park from S to o'clock- BELLE MERE Members of the Belle Mere club will meet Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. J. E. Goates. TRIPLE FOUR Mrs. Bert Sutton Is entertains ing members of the Triple Four Bridge club at her home Friday afternoon. UNIVERSITY DAMES A meeting of the University Dames will be held Thursday eve ning at 8 o clock at the home of Mrs. Ruth Boel, 244 West Third North street. Sewine and games will be the diversions. THIRD WARD GLEANERS Gleaners of the Third ward are to meet this evening at 7:0 o'clock in the Red Cross rooms at the Armory; BIRTHDAY LEAGUE Membts of Oj3 Birthday Lea gue wall meet Thursday at 1:30 o'clock at the home of Mrs. June Peterson. A pot-luck lunch will be served.- SeaguUGirb To Meet For Sewing Seagull girls of the Utah stake Primary are to meet at the Third ward hall Thursday at 3:30 o'clock for a sewing class. SUMMER, WARDROBE kph all last years clothes FRESHLY CLEANED! Madsen Cleaners made my last year's clothes have this year's look. It is good to know where my things can get a new wearing appeal, for war-time is the time to keep fresh at work with clean clothes. Let Madsen's Do Your Cleaning Work! MADSEN CLEANERS PHONE 475 Appetizers Are Gay, Delicious i t't" ft .-TS .i tit it -.. r- v. Serrs brolle4 perk tachew ltaf with grCIed tomatoes and cabbage By GAYNOR MADDOX NEA StafT Writer For Sunday's gala dinner, serve chilled tomato juice and zesty party appetizers. Or for your porch party, arrange a tray of dainty tidbits and sandwiches to serve with cool beverages. Appetizer Suggestions Alternate H inch slices of frankfurt or cubes of thuringer or salami with stuffed olives or pearl onions on colored toothpicks Cubes of luncheon loaf, alternated with cream cheese balls and bright cherries on toothpicks, is another festive appetizer. To make pinwheel appetizers shape braunschweiger liver sausage sau-sage Into balls around pimiento olives, sweet pickles, or cheese cubes. Dip in lemon juice and roll in minced parsley. Stick colored wood picks through the ball and insert these "tidbits" into a large rea appie or bright yellow grape- iruiu Meat Roll-Ups Another trick is to spread meat slices with cream cheese flavored with horseradish. Roll and secure with toothpicks. Cut apart and place parsley In the end of each little roll. Slices of cervelat rolled into cones, filled with pimento cheese, and held with a toothpick, are tempting and tasty. cut thin slices of rye bread in to rectangles 1 inch by 2 inches. Spread with mustard flavored SOIETTEA ro nnnnsin lalln. letters to one from loved ones-ore ones-ore precious. If your man is in o V-Mail area, your letters must photograph well on 16-mm film, so it can fly the oceans and be reprinted one-fourth size for him on arrival. Sheaffer's V-BLACK is an outstanding Permontnf, black writing fluid. BLACK PHOTOGRAPHS BESTI USE SHEAFFElXS V-BLACtteirt For Christmas Mail-Nowl W Hav HI . UTAH OFFICE SUPPLY 43 East Center, Phone 15 butter or margarine. Cut thin slices of cooked salami and thin slices of dill pickles into rectangles rec-tangles M Inch by 2 inches. Place a slice of each on bread. Cut rectangular strips of bread. Spread with butter and top with atrip of dry sausage. Spread outside out-side edges with cream cheese and dip in chopped parsley. Hot Appetizers With apple corer, remove center cen-ter from dill pickle. Cut a pencillike pencil-like stick of salami the length of the pickle. Spread with cream cheese. Push into the center of the pickle. Chill and cut into inch thick chips to serve. Clever little "sail boats" can be fashioned from email gherkins. .cream cheese and salami. Cut slice lengthwise off small sweet gherkin. Scoop out and fill with cream cheese. Insert 'sail" of wedge of salami. Summer Dishes Easily Prepared By GAYNOR MADDOX NEA Staff Writer The popular song. "Take It Easy," sounds tuneful in hot kitchens in summer. These easy-to-prepare meat dishes are definitely defi-nitely in season. Quick Summer Grill One lb. liver sausage, 4 large tomatoes, 8 onion slices, bacon drippings. Cut liver sausaee into slices about Vl inch thick; remove casing. cas-ing. Cut tomatoes in halves cross. wise. Arrange liver sausage slices ana tomatoes on broiler rack. Ton tomatoes with onion slices hmh with bacon driDoincs. broiler with ton of nnirm about 3 inches below broiler heat. Broil about 10 minutes. (No turning turn-ing of liver sausage slices, onion or tomatoes is necessarv.) Serw immediately. Serves 4. Spiced Ham and Corn Skillet Dinner One lb. snlced ham. in i 2 tablespoons butter. 2 tablespoons mmcea onion, z tablesnaona chopped green peooer. 2 eun whole kernel corn, cooked or canned. Cut spiced ham in 1 inch cuha Melt butter in skillet; add onion and green pepper. Saute until soft; add spiced ham and corn. Saute slowly 20 minutes or until lightly browned, stirring occasionally. occasion-ally. Serves 4. Taylor Returns From Buying Trip 1 Jnt1 Tf T.nl.. - mm . . ... .7uu m. xayior Brothers store has returned from aicago, wnere tie attended furn iture conventions and marts, also a music convention, held at the Palmer House hotel. Ha has been in tha Jtuy 9, ana purchased the fall merchandise in tn fnmitn.. floor coverings and hardware unci. Your Uniform Requires Perfect Posture As Well As Good Grooming By ALICIA ILUET NEA 8taft Writer v If you wear a uniform volunteer volun-teer group girl or G. L Jane you need to work harder to look nicer, than you do in civilian duds. Believer of this is the socially prominent lira. John M. Schlff, AWVS treasurer for Greater New York, who thinks a uniform de pends more upon good posture for dash and distinction than it does upon materials and tailoring. Her carnage is as erect in her quiet gray uniform as good posture can maxe ii The meticulous fit of her uni form is something Mrs. Schlff is exacting about. Sttouldera of her jacket are squared to her own. Skirt nem is kept precisely even. waistline is nipped wnere it ougnt to be. iVVth a reputation for fastidious grooming to defend, she keeps her uniform spotless and well pressed. is convinced that regulation shirt wlir hardly ever oblige with a second wearing. A neat tie, buttoned-up Jacket, a mirrorbright she shine, a hair-do confined by a net and a complete absence of Jewelry, except wrist watch, are as frank deflections of her good grooming habits as a full image of her in a mirror would be. WAVES' Parents Are Bidden To Luncheon In S. L. Utah WAVES' mothers and fathers and WAVES stationed at the naval supply depot at Clear field, plan to celebrate the second anniversary of the Women s Reserve Re-serve of the Navy at a luncheon in salt Lake City Sunday. Two hundred WAVES will at tend along with many Navy of ficers, and members of Civilian Naval Personnel committees. All mothers and fathers of WAVES are invited to attend, and should contact Mrs. Emil K. Nielson of Uhe Provo Navy Mothers' club by pnomng ssoj before Thursday noon. Young women from this state are now servinr in naval shore stations all over the country do ing jobs along with navy men. Some have been trained as hospital hos-pital technicians, gunnery and link trainer instructors, and many as secretaries and clerks. All of them are proud of their organ' isatlon, and of the excellent training train-ing and positions they have re ceived. The luncheon will be an inter esting occasion, and the presence of the WAVES should make it doubly so for all local mothers of girls in blue. BROWNIES One-quarter cup shortening. 2 tablespoons peanut butten, S ta blespoons cocoa, V cup sugar, 1 egg, H cup honey, cup flour. H teaspoon baking powder, M teaspoon salt, H cup nut meats, 1 teaspoon vanilla. Cream shortening and peanut butter. Add cocoa and sugar a little at a time. Cream well. Add egg and beat well. Add honey a little at a time, beat until well blended. Add baking powder and salt to sifted flour and sift to-' gether. Add nut meats. Mix well. Spread mixture in well - greased 8x8-inch pan. Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees F.) for 35 min utes. Cut into two-inch squares for serving. W r )'i p ' 'ii MRS. SCHD7F: Dashing. Farrer - Strong Reunion To Meet Neighbors and friends are in vited to join in the Farrer-Strong annual family reunion set for Saturday at Sowiette park. Sports for the children will be gin at 5 o'clock, with picnic supper sup-per at 6:30. followed by a pro gram at a o clock. BARBECUED MEAT LOAF One-half cup sliced onion, 2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce, M cup vinegar, hi cup brown sugar, H cup water, 1 teaspoon dry mustard, 1 teaspoon paprika, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 pound sliced ready-to-serve meat loaf, hot cooked rice. Combine 'onion, Worcestershire sauce, vinegar, sugar, water, mus tard, paprika and salt; cook until thickened. Add meat loaf slices to sauce; cook 10 to 15 minutes. Serve on hot cooked rice. Serves 4 to 6. If desired, serve on toast or split toasted rolls. DAILY HERALD "wlSSy PAGE S j STARTS TODAY! "A" gas ration card holders are responsible for onlv 9.1 ter cent of the total annual mileaere of the Starts Today 1 I -JLwlf MESTHflSTCI ill iimtrtit sn ssunwsais CO-FEATURE seaJ0l.3 f3 s- RITTFR " - 3 SONG-STUDDED, STAR-STUNNING SAGA OF AMERICA'S SHOW-WORLD SHOW-WORLD AT WAR I fiEORGE RAPT X Ova gtorg JEANETTE MacDONALD ORSON WELLES koot wcraa so MARLENE DIETRICH DINAH SHORE DCNALOO'COra PE6GT RYAN W. C FEDS Tte ANDREWS SISTERS ARTUR RUBINSTEIN CARMEN AMAYA AID NEI COSUIT f5 SOPHIE TUCKER xirnn DUVTUU BftVe. WUTIER'S BRICKLAYERS ( ' if' I 1 1 13 H R'JhX tiff hmtm mmit m 7: I TED LEWIS ? BANS FREDDIE SLACK CRCH. CKARLE SPIYAX CSCH. LOUIS JORDAN IS ORCH. - GRACE Mc DONALD CHARLES BUTTE RWOKTH . MARTHA O DR1SCOU CHARLEY CRAPCWM ELIZABETH PATTERSON REGIS TOOMEY Diradad by CDDIf -a. SUTHERLAND Out-of-Town Guests Feted Climaxing delightful July 24th. Mr. and Mrs. Denxel A. Brown gave a dinner In their garden for relatives who were here from of-of-town. Dinner was served buffet style, beautiful flowers from the garden decorating the table. Colored lights and gay lawn furnishings added a festive note to the gay holiday occasion. Those attending were: Dr. and Mrs. W. Drew Chipman of Los Angeles, Calif., Mr. and Mrs. J. Milon Chipman. Mr. and Mrs. Claron Q. Spencer, and Mr. and Mrs, P. Drew Clarke of Salt Lake City. Mrs. Heber Clegg of Arlington, Arl-ington, Va., Mrs. Samuel S. Cowley of Washington, D. C, Mrs. VelaU dark and Mrs. Sadie Woodger of Provo. Mother, Daughter Party Delightful To honor her daughter and friend who are here from Los An-geles, An-geles, Calif., Mrs. J. A. Johnston was hostess to a group of their former school friends and their mothers Tuesday evening at her home. ComDlimented were Crs. R. G. Henson (Elsie Johnston) and Mrs. Mont Sowby (Beth Hayes). Bineo was nlaved. Mrs. Phvllis Johnson winning the high score prize. Lunch was served to Mrs. Lois McDonald, Mrs. Serena Van ce, airs. Mary p. Humphries. Mrs. Eleanor Prows. Mrs. Sallv Sor. ens en. Mrs. Louise Palmer, Mrs. lone K. Sutherland, Mrs. Mark Keroy, Mrs. Leona Boyack, Mrs. Sadie Madsen. Mrs. Phvllis John- son, Mrs. Ardis Johnson, Mrs. Ka-thryn Ka-thryn Falls, Mrs. Vivian Berrell, Mrs. jsaiin cottam. Miss Emma Hayes and Miss Jean Johnston. Provo Visitors Given Party A delightful function of this " afternoon was the party given toy Mrs. Harold T. Cbrlstensen at her home, to compliment a group ojt -former friends who are visiting here from out-of-town. Those honored were Mrs. Bella Fillmore Stewart of Riverside, Calif.; Mrs. Moreno AUred Deck-er Deck-er of New York; Mrs. Beth Pax-man Pax-man Pulley of San Francisco, Calif.; Mrs. Audrey Raamussen Tarant, who recently arrived from West Africa, and who is leaving shortly to make her home In New York; Mrs, Laura Mensel Montorl of Concord, Calif.; and Mrs. Gwea Bruegger Biddulph now of Venice, Utah. Gladioli were employed in dee-orating. dee-orating. A tastefully appointed luncheon was served during the visiting and reminiscing. Other guests were Mrs. Margaret Mar-garet B. Nelson. Mrs. Beulah 8. Swenson. Mrs. Florence P.. Britsch, Mrs. Vera J. Millet, Mrs. Monta W. Anderson, Mrs. Amy Y. Valentine and Mrs. Norma P. Wright Theater Party Is Given On Birthday A theater party at the Paramount Para-mount Tuesday afternoon delighted delight-ed guests bidden to Marjorie Har-dins's Har-dins's twelfth birthday party, civ- en by her mother, Mrs. Maurice Harding. Later, at the home, a tasty luncheon and birthday cake were served. Gifts were presented to Marjorie. The following girl friends were present: Norma Tucker, Ann. G re the Ball if. Karen Lee and Mauree LeVieve Earl. Bernice Benson, Rosalie Hall, Elaine McDonald, Mc-Donald, Carol Jeah Clark and Liane Harding. Plus: "LIBERATION OF ROME NEWS STARTS TOMORROW! TWO BiS Hits Ends Tonight! "STANDING ROOM ONLY -UUiesple's Criminal Case' Ik If II sccrt lis $M est cf yes! 1 . CO-HITI 1 J 1 mm m COOL AS A MOUNTAIN TOP! O Ends Tonight 'STEP LIVELY" GEORGE MURPHY FRANK SINTTRA STARTS THURSDAY; I a S '()t) il DOUBLE SHOW VALUE! The STRANGEST STORY EVER TOLD! 7he Stars ofTha Cttt mm ImkCi QENT:Sf.!ITn r ' - Now Playing! Today! U-G-ITs MM 9H " - . i v ; y Gsorw MURPHY . Ginny SIM!S, X-ffw Chss. ViTiudiGER Gloria DsHAVEH ' rCFiuviS'l i ira naw ma irSrgg ...wjBS IWALKEl BLUE SSTOS MAM WBtM tm 1 nnsaev A mams HsdSCOTf BOWERS V0SS Starting Friday 4VIIRACLE OF MORGAN'S CREEK" cwiuivry a luivcia. |