OCR Text |
Show ..GENEVA TIMES tlielvitefi e(ia . Prepared by PHYLLIS SNOW " Strtlc Dirtclor Mountain Fuel Supply Company baked riu'c.' r:; RHt'BARB FOR SPRING ' Someone should invent ever-bearing rhubarb, but since it now nmes only in the spring, let's make the most of its delicious tartness j deep pink color while its lats. I-'ot family meals, here is a simple w most effective dessert. Sr. J h-1 or cold it is just the thing to Jake on your first steak fry t:.. canyon. 1 M all at onc. ., ?! vigorously vigorous-ly Liniil mixture aides of c floor Vi i. salt :. R. move from the heat and cool illghtly. :. Add unbeaten. ine at a time 4 egrri i beat thoroughly after each addition) h. i'rap by spoonfuls on a greased sheet liuke. 6. When ready to dm, make a eat In top of each with a sharp knife and fill with Khubarb Filling. Sprinkle tops with powdered sujrar or eover with seasoned whipped cream. Yield 16 large puffs. Temp. MO' 1, Combine ..1 lb. rhn'i 1-in. iiii'i-. At witter c. iir" 1 Bsks. VOTE- If Wmo" IwIy. the finish-! r-od-net will have a rich, red k.ui the Pie" wi" hoJd 'h"ir "'""" Tarlstio"" f? lboi'sSawherries, washed hulled W nd halved. ChiH. " ft) 4 slices pineapple and Ml - Pin- apple joice. chi11-M chi11-M TJse ! lb. rhubarb. Add to It both strawberries and pineapple. These can make any gathering a party: CREAM PUFF SURPRISE jap, 4(jt Time $5-40 mln. J, Bring to soiling point .1 e, wster e. butter RHUBARB FILLING 1. Cook about 20 min. or until rhubarb is soft and mixture is thick 2. Cool. I. Fold In- -lHe. diced rhubarb y c. sugar V4 c. water -1 e. cream, whipped Yield Vfa e. filling or enough for 12 large cream pints. VINEYARD Malicon C. Wells Phone 0893J1 There will be no Sunday School in Vineyard on Sunday morning due to General Conference Con-ference in Salt Lake City. Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Blake and Mr. and Mrs. James T. Blake at-' at-' tended funeral services in Mur- t ray on Saturday for their sister-in-law, Mrs. Magdalene Anderson Ander-son Blake. I Miss Merline Mills spent the ' weekend in Lehi with her sister, (Mrs. Glen Baldwin and family. Miss Marjorie Turner of Vancouver, Van-couver, British Columbia, arrived arriv-ed by plane to visit with her ' sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Howard M. Anderson, and children. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Beaves of Glendwoodville. Alberta, Canada, Cana-da, spent last weekend here with her uncle, Thomas Wells, and (family. They were enroute to , their home, having spent the win ter in California and Arizona. Twenty acres of land have been readied and planted to grain during the past week by i ward members. The Relief Soci-: Soci-: ety women furnished the lunch ' tv.v the workers. This is the church welfare assignment for the ward and the land has been contributed for use by the Geneva Gen-eva Stel Co. The following ward members attended the Orem Temple excursion ex-cursion on Friday: President and Mrs. Walter Holdaway, Mr. and ' Mrs. Raymond Harding, Mr. and j Mrs. Grant Zabriskie, Mr. and S. II. Blake, Mr. and Mrs. Ber-I Ber-I nard Anderson. Mr. and Mrs. I Ross Holdaway, Mr. and Mrs. ! Ray Gammon. Mr. and Mrs. Max ; Blake, Mr. and Mrs. August iSchroeder, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson 'Jenkins, Mr and Mrs. Le Roy Schroder, Mr. and Mrs. David Jenkins, Mrs. Hulda Orvin, Mrs. Olena Gammon, Marcel Young George F. Wells, and La Von I Morrill. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Colton of Salt Lake City visited here : during the week with their daughter. Mrs. Wesley Rawlings. who has been removed from the American Fork hospital following follow-ing a major operation. She is convalescing at her home. NEW SUBSCRIBERS Shirl P. Morrill Steve Buffo II. Wells Meeks Ernan Y. Smith L. M. Atchison W. J. Houtz ' H. W. Clark Mrs. J. E. Switzer Booth Maycock Grant R. Rowley Forrest Ferguson Sam Crosby Harold E. Peterson Earl A. Miller C. A. Garvie S. D. Woodard Nelson Webster Lowell White Effie J. Pinegar Charles L. McClure Harry Butler Fellows who drive with one hand are usually headed for church. Some will walk down the aisle, others will be carried. PLEASANT VIEW MIA TO HOLD OPEN NIGHT The Pleasant View ward MIA will hold Open Night on Tuesday Tues-day evening. The program will include talks from the Speech Department; musical numbers by the Music department; and a one-act play, "Five for Bad I. lick" by the Drama department. depart-ment. Dancing will be enjoyed during the remainder of the evening. Wiien she went out to drive Obeyed all the rules ncL came home ALIVE ! Mother Goose was no goose! Wise drivers enjoy living enough to obey the simple drix'ng rules that are made for their safety. The tragedy is that too many are willing to take chances just to save a few seconds. Result-9J killedSJOO injured every day of the year. You should know the rules of the road; if you don't, learn them. Behind the wheel, remember them respect them, and the chances are you'll drive free from accidents. Ignore them and you gamble with precious lives including your owni SPEND SAVE LIVES Contributed in the public interest by OREM SAFETY CGOiL GENEVA TRANSPORTATION GO. OREM LADY LIONS HOME SERVICE CO, GENERAL REAL ESTATE & INSURANCE SCERA THEATRE SIMMONS LUMBER & HARDWARE OREM - GENEVA TIMES Give laby Chicks Plenty of Room Says Poultry Expert Hundred of thousands ot baby chicks which die each year in Utau couiu be saveu oy exercise of several well-estubhsned i..ac-tices, i..ac-tices, Dr. Lawrence Morris, extension ex-tension poultryman, Utah extension exten-sion service, Logan, asserted this week. Cause of most deaths of brooder brood-er etncKs is crowding too many chicks in available space, Dr. Morris said. Most reliable practice prac-tice is to allow one square foot of floor space to each two chicks, or 250 clucks in a 10 by 12 foot brooder house, he recommended. Chicks Need Room Overcrowding demands more careful attention to the chicks, and usually results m 'uneven and slower growth and slower feathering. Disease also is more likely to break out in overcrowd ed quarters. The net result is higher mortality and a poorer quality chick and interior adult bird, the specialist said. More chicks probably are ov erheated and die, than die from too little heat. The area under the brooder should be warm, BO-! 05 degrees the first week, but the brooder house itself siioulijl be cold. Chicks kept in a room that is tog warm grow and feath er slowly and are . less tlnif'y than chicks that are brooded in a cool or cold room with a warm brootler stove. Chicks should be allowed outdoors at the earliest possible age, even though weather is cold, but not wet and damp. Floor drafts should be a-voided a-voided in the brooder house, Dr. Morris added. Feed Them Early Contrary to recommendations of a few years ago, chicks should be fed as soon as they will eat and not starved for 60 or 70 hours. This means feeding when SPOTLIGHTING UTAH Big Mountain To Be Celebration Location I Tentative plans are now being formed to fittingly observe Pion-! eer Day next July 24 on the sum-' mit of Big Mountain, where the Mormon Pioneers first glimpsed Salt Lake Valley 101 years ago. The Utah State Road Commission Commis-sion has promised to have the road which starts at the "This is the Place" Monument graveled and oiled in time for the celebration. cele-bration. Another project is to develop 11 roadside parks along the highway, high-way, three to be named after the three women in the first party of pioneers; however, the park projects will be held up until ownership of the land in question quest-ion can be determined. P.I.D. lo Have Booths at Coast Vacation Show The Utah Department of Publicity Pub-licity has arranged ' to have a Utah booth at a coming Los An-I An-I poles Vacation and Sportsmen's Lshow, and also at a San Francis- they are 24 to 36 hours old, it was recommended. The first feed should consist of a good thick starter mash which should be kept before the chicks at ill times. Some chick-sized grain might be sprinkled on the i.ixsh for the first two or three days. Water also should be part of the first feed. "The chick's body is over 60 water, so provide at least three water vessels for each 100 chicks," it was urged by Dr. Morris. Too many brooder houses are located close to the laying house. This means that after the chicks are two or three weeks old they must range on the same ground with the old hens. Most old birds are carriers of coccidiosis and leucosis (range paralysis), al-i al-i though they may not be affect-! affect-! ed, the poultryman said. DON'T TAKE LESS! YOUR USED TIRES ARE WORTH MORE AT FIRESTONE ffT'T'TH Trade in Now for THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 1948 co show of a similar nature. The object will be to Induce more Coast people to come to Utah for their vacations, for fishing, camping and hunting. At a Los Angeles vacation show in 1946, more than 125,000 people visited visit-ed the Utah booth during the ten days of the show. Zion Garden Spot To Be Beautified The beautification of the little town of Springdale adjacent to the west entrance of Zion National Na-tional Park, is now underway. Located in a picturesque valley and enjoying a semi-tropical climate, cli-mate, the area will be converted into a veritable Garden of Eden through the cooperation of the Mormon Church, the Utah State Agricultural College and Charles Smith, superintendent of the Zion National Park. Cattle Rustlers Worry Northern Counties Police officers of Cache, Box Elder, Weber and Davis counties coun-ties are planning a campaign against cattle rustling in Northern Nor-thern Utah. In the eaily days, cattle rustling rust-ling was not a criminal occupation; occupa-tion; anyone who could round up a maverick an animal with out a brand could claim the beast. Many a rancher built up his herd in this manner taking tak-ing the mavericks from the open range. The modern rustler, however, works in a different manner. Locating Lo-cating a cattle feed lot near the highway, he lures an animal to the fence by placing feed just beyond its reach under cover of darkness When the bovine approaches, ap-proaches, it is shot, butchered, loaded into a trick and carried away. Rustling activities are credited to the high price of beef. Utah Underground War Plant Sites Investigated United Slates military officials have carefully inspected possible underground war plant sites in east central Utah. The inspection is preparatory to blasting tests, set for late this year to determine deter-mine feasibility of underground war plant construction. Colonel Joseph S. Gorlinskl, army engineer head, district office, of-fice, Sacramento, California, supervised su-pervised the inspection of Utah sites. Definile explosion tests are planned for areas in the vicinity of Castle Dale in central Utah and the Dugway Proving Grounds in Western Utah. J -A1 I , ' -a Alls V V f A V' ... 4i ; 7 CHAf.'FlOiJS For safe, trouble free driving equip your car with Firestone De Luxe Champions. Come in, get our liberal trade-in allowance. FRI., SAT. APRIL 2-3 PAY AsToV AS I25 A WEEK BUY TO-DAY, THE BUDGET WAY FIRESTONE STORE PUOVO Phone 39 223 West Center Another , Wondirful Coldvyn Comtdyl I I 1 ' t 1 u -'-"' 1 r U h ! f ) Cary Grant Lnrotta Young David Niven "It's great charm, its deeply moving moments, its light comedy com-edy and above all, its ability to imbue audiences with sincere happiness makes this picture fine, uplifting entertainment for everyone." Showmen's Trade Review S. S. S. Fun Matinee Saturday, April 3. 1:30 lo 3:30 Stablcmates An action comedy starring Wallace Beery. and Special on the Stage ZINGER & DIGGLE in a magical mag-ical act especially arrange for children! . Admission: 10c and 20c (This program onlv) MON.. TUES.. WED.. April 5-6-7 Shirley Temple - Ronald Reagan An interesting melodrama which depicts an exceptional New England Eng-land family and their peculiar problem they had to solve! Exciting Ex-citing cast with good acting! and- "Rain, fleet or snow can't hurt this coat . . I've just had it cleaned by the MARINE CLEANERS." rrnmmm mm "MM Jack Carson, Martha Vickers A light musical comedy! |