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Show THE Page Six Salmon and Rice . Mold Late Summer Treat T . l, tna-'- l a itHr m.' i.niu.m.1 . Mim...i.;..HmwwJ Nephi Items BY DOROTHY MADD OX jellied salmon and rice mold makes dish for your late summer porch party, your Labor Day at home, or for your canasta luncheon. Served with warm French bread and iced tea, it's quite an event A RICH, the perfect beautiful-to-look-- ... ojEfeoct at , . f , . - in Itself. SALMON KICE MOLD WITH ASPIC rice, 1 package cup One recipe easy tomato aspic, lemon-flavorcup cold water, 2 tablegelatin, I cup hot water, spoons vinegar, V4 cup mayonnaise, 1 teaspoon salt, y8 teaspoon can) red salmon, pepper, 1 teaspoon grated onion, 1 cup drained and flaked, 1 cup diced celery, 2 tablespoons chopped dill pickle. Prepare easy tomato aspic as directed below and pour into ring mold. Chill until almost firm. rice as directed on package. Meanwhile, prepare Cool to room temperature. While rice is cooling, dissolve gelatin in hot water. Add cold water, vinegar, mayonnaise, salt, pepper and onion. Mix well. Chill until slightly thickened. Then add salmon, celery, dill pickle and the cooled lice.. Pour over tomato aspic layer. Chill until firm. Unmold and garnish with crisp salad greens. Serve with additional mayonnaise. Makes 8 to 10 servings. gelatin Easy Tomato Aspic: Dissolve 1 package in l'A cups hot water. Add 1 can (8 ounces) tomato sauce, V-teaspoon salt and dash of pepper. Blend. tablespoons vinegar, Mold as directed above. For breakfast or afternoon tea or coffee, these pineapple muffins are going to make a lot of people happy. They are made with non-fdry milk an easy way to economy. Pineapple Muffins Two cups sifted flour, 3 tablespoons non-fdry milk, 2V4 teaspoons baking powder, 2 tablespoons sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, xk cup shortening, 2 eggs, I flat can ci'.'rhed oinepple H .ip) undraincd pre-cook- ed ( ed 'J - ce - V . ; Mrs. Archie Tidwell and Mrs. Clifton Smith of American Fork spent the week end in Nephi with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tidwell and family. pre-cook- ed lemon-flavor- with llic PORT IS St Regis at When you wear this smart new PORTIS style you'll be the center of admiring attention . . . for this handsome felt improves your appearance and gives you that well dressed look. The Beta Literary Club held their first meeting of the new club season on Thursday, September 10 at the home of Mrs. G. R. Phillips. Mrs. Ernest I. Wilson, club president gave the address of welcome and a report of a district convention held at Payson in May. Program booklets for the year were distributed by Mrs. Phillips .program chairman. The 1953- 54 program theme is "Education, The Heritage of Freedom" The following members were present? Mrs. Milton Shaw, Mrs. George D. Haymond Jr., Mrs. Jack Ludlow, Mrs. .rnest I. Wilson, Mrs. A. V Jacobsen, Mrs Mav Bowles, Mrs. Arnold Brough, Mrs. $6.50 UTAH POUir T ; Your Palomino Breeders Have Stiff Standards UTAH Manager 5 Sayit 5 true palomino, today's rules specify "the body color must not be more than three shades lighter or darker than a newly minted gold coin. The mane and tail must be white, silver, or ivory, with not more than 15 per cent dark hairs A LaMar Dalby Utah Poultry is your home g town friend and neighbor c NOT a White stockings and a forehead blaze of white can set off the proud golden coat. But woe betide the errant palomino with a hint of zebra stripes on its legs or a dark stripe down its back. These markings disqualify for registration. or- - profit-makin- g but qaniiation, a profit- - j 5S sharing group. Let us show S o oat3 you how we can save S X money Body Fat Necessary CHICAGO An article in Today's Health, American Medical Asso- for YOU. ciation publication, states that not having enough body fat is just as dangerous as having too much. Fatty tissue in proper amounts is essential to the human body. About 10 to 15 per cent of the total body weight is considered a normal amount of fatty tissue. m iLtAi -- either." in . . operating to save you time and money. This is g I- Advtrtlstmimt Jk4 Joe Marsh From where I sit ... . Cream Whips Main Street Traffic 4T green three times. After the kitten had enough, Tiny waved the traffic through. From where I Bit, this was Just a "Tiny" demonstration of the way people in oar town are. They're usually pretty considerate and tolerant If one of our neighbors prefers a good glass of beer to his friend's coffee at dinnertime, it's just each to his own taste and everything's "smooth as cream" between them. Big traffic jam in front of the office last week. Thought everybody in the county was coming in to buy The Clarion, but they weren't. can fell off Seems a Whitey Fisher's truck, spilling cream all over the street. Our cop on duty, Tiny Fields, halted traffic so Whitey could pick up the can. Tiny was about to wave the cars on when a kitten ran out and started lapping up the cream. Well, traffic piled up, but Tiny paid no heed. Light changed Copyright, v, TOASKM6 BIDINO-HARM- I r H THAT, SJfeAOTIFUL- 19S3, MwWNtu FKfcSM AIM ION h i i i .1 sii i a a . ' - ; Briggs WE HAVE RECEIVED our new sample cabinet of Burgoyne Cus tom Made Christmas cards . . this is a dine of nicest cards all top We engraved. quality steel-diinvite you to come in now and select your cards so that they may be obtained now before the supply is exhausted in any partic e ular card number. Your cards will be yours EXCLUSIVELY in this area . . sample will be removed from the line when an order is placed, thus assuring you muffins. one-mil- e FOR RENT Two bedroom apartment, furnished or unfurn- - that your cards will be exclusished new eJectric stove and ive. Don't wait too long, as there refrigerator. Large closets. Lee is a limited supply of any given s card . . do it now. Bailey, phone 74. ON FAST, EXPERT Co., Phone WITH SERVICE No matter what's wrong, we'll make if right, But FAST! Ask about our monthly inspection, cleaning and adjusting service. WILL BE IN NEPHI WITH MOBILE TYPEWRITER SHOP. SEPT 21 to 24th (Leave your name at The Times-Newphone 196, if you want us to call at your home). s, OFFICE THOMPSON Times-New- Publishing TAP... RIGHT CO. MACHINES 196. f i OFFMAN WITH EASY VISION pi-PHONi- a -- hi-- h c New Dimension in Sound jALL CHANNEL TUNING on One Control! 1ATHEM great-grandso- rock-boun- Japan Faces Population Problem a I m i a wrw v i PRICES START at J 179.9! ; . 17 inch . 21 inch d PAINTS TRANVBTA i !" Salmon Rice Mold in Jelly mskes a substantial and handsome luncheon dish for a party. Sift together flour, non-fa- t, dry milk powder, baking powder, sugar and salt into mixing bowl. Cut in shortening. Beat egg and stir in undrained crushed pineapple. Add to dry ingredients. Stir only until flour is dampened. Spoon into greased muffin full. Bake at 400 degrees F. hot pans, filling each well about iu w umiuies. manes tu large or 38 very small teatime Unfurnished. FOR RENT Rov W. Hanson. Mrs. Harlow W, Pexton. Mrs. Fred Morgan, Mrs. apartment with complete floor cov- Hal Mickelson, Mrs. Othel Pay.ierings, furnace and stoker. Call Mrs Allen Belliston, Mrs. Roy E, 146J or see Mrs. Theron Snyder Gibson Mrs. Kenneth Nyman, Mrs. at 19o East 3rd South Wm. R. Worley Jr., Mrs. Bert Powell, a guest, Mrs Don Wheel- Oklahoma Cop Spots wright, and the hostess, Mrs. G. R. Phillips. From Air Speeders light refreshments were served OKLAHOMA CITY- -If you are by the officers. speeding in Oklahoma you need to look out for more than just patrol Members of the Nephi Lady cars. Lt. Art Hamilton, a highway Lions Club held their regular patrolman, catches speeders the on Thursday evening, Sept. easy way from an airplane. meeting Hamilton is the official pilot of 10 at the home of President Enid Christensen. A delicious luncheon the Oklahoma patrol's light traffic was served and outgoing officers plane, which first went into servwere presented with gifts. ice in 1949 as an aid to prevent The following members were in traffic jams. attendance; President Enid ChrisBefore long, however, he was tensen, Eleanor Peterson, Eudora radioing information on traffic viBowers, Geraldine Barker, Flor- olationssuch as passing on hills ence Lunt, Elaine Fowkes, Ruth to ground units. OfGardner, Jean Westring, Maude and curves Robertson, Eva McPherson and fending motorists were flabberGwen Jackson. gasted, to put it mildly. To catch speeding automobiles he clocks them over a measured The American Legion Auxiliary course with a stopwatch and conmembership drive was spearhead verts the reading into miles per ed this week with a buffet supper hour. For mileage, he uses the section-lin- e and program at the home of Mrs roads that Will L. Hoyt, resident, planned crisscross Oklahoma like a waffle. for Wednesday evening. Thursday, Setember 17 has been Greal-Grandso- ns set aside by an act of congress as citizenship day. The anniversary of the ratification of the constitu Of Bounty Mutineers tion also falls on that date. The ideals of the two are snynonymous Members were urged to emphasize Live on Pifcairn in their homes the worth and the meaning of United States Citizen PITCAIRN ISLAND The ship with its rights and respon of the Bounty mutineers sibilities. A resume of the program for still live on the bleak and isolated the year was presented and plans Pacific Island of Pitcairn. were discussed. Officers of the The island has no harbor or American Legion Auxiliary extend beach and the Pitcairners must an invitation to all eligible Jadies row their longboat through to join the organization. the heavy surf which constantly coast to pounds the come alongside the ships that anchor off the mile-wid- e island Big rising 1,000 feet above the South Pacific. These descendants of men who TOKYO Japan faces one of the carried out the most famous greatest population problems of mutiny in history trade tropical fruit for clothes, medical supplies, any country in the world today. The average population density, and odd luxuries. The longboat carries the mails, too. particularly in the lowland regions, is high. The density, to the square The secrets of the reefs have mile of arable land is the highest been handed down since the mutinin the world 3,000, compared with eers of Captain Bligh's Bounty 2,440 in Britain and 240 in the settled on the island in 1790 after United States. burning their ship. The problem is bound to beThe present skipper of the Pitcome more acute through the cairn longboat is Andrew Young, a years as the population is indirect descendant of the Bounty mutineer of the same name. Like creasing constantly and rapidly. The question of food becomes of his Young is an the greatest Importance from the expert seaman and always mans standpoint of the nation as well as the steering oar a vital job. that of the individual. Young doubles as the island's radio operator and postmaster. Since the food value derived from a given amount of grain is Every passing sea captain knows several times greater than that him. Young has maintained the radio link since the days of the of milk or meat produced by feeding the same amount of grain to crystal director and spark coils. animals, Japanese farmers do not Today his equipment is as modern raise livestock on a large scale. as any in the South Pacific. The nation depends on fish to meet the requirements of protein. The per capita consumption of fish is sixty pounds a year. Fortunately the shallow Japan Sea and the lace-likHARTFORD, Conn, Mrs. Viola coastline, dotted with hundreds of islands Dalsey Wienski claims ownership of a narrow strip of land which and harbors, provide exception makes up most the coastline of ally good fishing grounds. Delaware. She bases her claim on old land grants and family wills she has gathered. She says she is a descendant of Thomas Dazey, one of the first Huguenot settlers and f tT WA AlB M WAN 10 has land grants issued by William MS COT IT- - MY! 1'MUK.KY rWCAMfc -BY IN VOOB Ntfc Penn. MEW CAS HOW CAN Vf?tit n If her claim is verified, her title rT HUT OOK4 N"' "t. will relieve Delaware from a diM0 lemma that has plagued ic since tAOTOTt CO. earliest times. She explains that, although some building has been done on the coastal land, no one has been able to acquire clear title to any of it because of the ancient colonial grants and, since 1830, Delaware statutes have prohibited "adverse possession" (acquiring ownership of land because of long w AL A? THATgU VEHICLE, s' Delaware Coastline United States Brewers Foundation GOOD OLD V e Tnee liIL NOTHINC Y tf Woman Claims lUi 06 ' , ' and Mrs. Charles - WASHINGTON No bluebook of high society ever set stiffer standards of entry than those of the register of palomino horses. POULTRYg Mr. and daughter Eileen of ElCajon, California are viisting with Mr. and Mrs. Lester Briggs and Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Stephenson. ed at 1953 EARLY ELBERTA PEACHES -Tree Ripe Bring containers Jackson Fruit Farm, 900 South Utah Among the relatives here for Main, Payson, the funeral services for Jack Wright last Thursday were Mr. SAND SOIL GRAVEL and Mrs. C. F. Hesse of Yuma, ROAD MATERIAL Phone 4428 P. Mr. Alma Mrs. and Arizona, Burton of Orem, Mr. and Mrs Payson . . BUILDERS JSUPPLY. Franklin Jones and Mrs Eva Jones of Murray, Mrs. Glen Worthing-to- n of Logan, and C. G. Burton of Salt Lake City. Mr. and Mrs. C. F, Hesse left for their home in Yuma, Arizona Tuesday following a visit here at the home of Mrs T. H. Burton, mother of Mrs. Hesse. una ,l.J,.ilil,i,,iiii.uiiu,ii 17, September Thursday, NEPHI, UTAH TIMES-NEW- The strip Mrs. Wionski claims is 12 miles long, south of Reho- wide. both, and Is a quarter-mil- e It makes up most of the coastline of the second smallest state in the Union. ALL SETS INSTALLED TO YOUR SATISFACTION by our trained technicians for perfect reception. Look to us for fast courteous service on all makes of TV and Radiso. Just call 75J JUST CALL 75J . . YOUR TV CENTER AT . . u uMffi PHONE 75 J- - NEPHI 137 SOUTH MAIN nnnrzi nnnif ir r r A i t LTuiLJ VJ Li U U LiU VLyL.Z) WE ARE NEVEO UNDERSOLD NEPHI) LEVAN OR MONA CUT RATE GAS AND OIL NEPHI, UTAH |