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Show Fri., November 27, 1 9 4 2 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - THE SENTINEL, MIDVALE, SOCIETY AND CLUBS \ IV A E. BARROWS, Society Editor '--~----------------------~ Service Men Feied Ai Dance Friday Two hundred service men from Camp Kearns were guests at a dance given by the West Jordan community Friday evening at the school. Girls from Midvale and Sandy joined the West and South Jordan girls in entertaining the boys. Punch and wafers were served throughout the evening. In Charge of the affair were Mrs. Arthur Richardson and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Jorgenson. Mrs. Sorenson Entertains Birthday Club Mrs. A. J. Sorenson of Sandy was hostess to members of her birthday club Friday afternoon. A beautiful arrangement of chrysanthemums decorated the table where covers were laid for eight guests. Prizes for contract scores were won by Mrs. Bryan Bird and Mrs. A. E. Pearson. Past Presidents Club To Meet Monday The Past Presidents club of the American Legion auxiliary, will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Howard Barrows, 193 Lincoln street. Family Entertains Soldier on Furlough Sunday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Bowen entertained at a preThanksgiving dinner in honor of their son, Corporal Hyrum Bowen, who is home on a furlough from Camp Forrest, Tennessee. Covers were laid for 27 guests, incmd.ng the family, Miss Honore Stagg, Miss Beth Jensen of Salt Lake City, Clarence Jackson and the guest of honor. A lovely bowl of fall chrysanthemums was the centerpiece. Corporal Bowen left wednesday to resume his duties at Camp Forrest. Mr. and Mr$. Bird Entertain Guests ai Dinner Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Bird entertained at dinner Sunday at their home on State street. Guests included Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Mitchell of Copperton, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Sorenson and Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Peterson of Sandy. On Friday the Birds were guests at a wedding reception honoring Mr. and Mrs. Dean Bird which was held at the Springville First ward amusement hall. Union P.-T.A. Sponsor Membership Tea The membership tea sponsored by the P.-T.A. Monday afternoon at the Union junior 1ligh auditorium, was considered very successful. The social culminated "Parents Visiting Day.' Mrs. Lynn Chiverall was general chairman. Mrs. Grace B. Johnson was in charge of the refreshment committee. Those pouring were Mrs. C. A. Rosenhan and Miss Elva Glover. Refreshments were served to ninety-six. Musical numbers under the direction of Arthur Partington were given by the school's symphony orchestra. Instrumental solos by Jed Fenstermaker and Elden Tame accompanied by Mrs. E. Smith were featured. Reed Egbert Honored By Parents Monday Reed .t.gben, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wn!ord Egbert, has enlisted in the Marine Corps and will leave VIes~ Jordan Friday (today) to join his troop. Reed's parents enterta.neu 1.or h1m at their home in vv ~s., .J vraan Monday evening. Progress1ve games were played, after which refreshments were served to Lee Dimond, Frances haun , Nathan and Berneice Butterworth, Ivan Oakeson, Max Egbert, Paul Jones, Devon Burton, Roy Peterson, Earl Richardson and Arden Tesch. Mrs. Kemp Entertains For Family Mrs. Joe Ken1p of Salt Lake entertained at a birthday luncheon honoring Harvey A. Kemp of Crescent, 65 years of age, his son, Joe Kemp, 30, and a grandson, 4 year, whose birthdays fell on the same day. Progressive games were played and luncheon was served from small tables to 15 guests, all members of the family. Miss Wanda Kemp of West Jordan was in attendance. The party was given recently on their birthday anniversarise. Union Fort Camp, Daughters of Utah Pioneers, met Thursday afternoon with Mrs. May Smart. The Lesson was given by Mrs. Leila B. Nix. The life history of Mrs. Elizabeth A. Morris was read by her great-granddaughter, Mrs. Louise Babcock. Refreshments were served to 12 members. Louise Edna Moser Weds Mitchell LeRoy Forbush .In a quiet home ceremony Saturday evening, Louise Edna Moser of Salt Lake City, became the bride of Mitchell LeRoy Forbush, son of Mrs. Rachel Forbush of East Midvale. Bishop J. C. Burton officiated and only members of the two families were in attendance. Miss Evelyn Moser attended her sister and Antoine Vitert acted as best man. Mr. Forbush has enlisted in the U. S. navy, and expects to leave for his post during the week. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Brady and Mr. and Mrs. Myron Westerman and small son Frankie and daughter Kathryrf of Salt Lake were guests at the home of Mrs. James Silvey and family Sunday. Happy Mothers Feied By Mrs. Hilda Smart "The Happy Mothers" met Saturday afternoon with Mrs. Hilda Smart. Dinner was served and covers were laid for Mrs. Ellen Nance, Mrs. Kate Brady, Mrs. Nancy Milne, Mrs. Nettie Ray, Mrs. May Smart, Mrs. Martha Milne, Mrs. Jess Nix, and Mrs. Carrie Johnson. Special guests were Mrs. Leon Smart and Mrs. Carl Wozab. VASES VASES VASES Union Fort Camp Holds Mc.eting Little Benny Gene Beckstead has been spending a week with her grandmother, Mrs. Eliza Beckstead of Midvale. She is the daughter of Pvt. Adelbert H. Beckstead, who is now stationed at Camp Gordon, Ga., with the U. S. army. He has another baby girl, Donna. BUY WAR BONOS VASES vASES VASES SEE OUR GORGEOUS ORCHIDS IN STOCK AT ALL TIMES > Delivered Any Place in the United States. Telegraph Service Dellvery. PHELPS FLORAL CO. ~ "Every Day Is Flower Day" sasYA SISYA sasYA S::ISYA Ph. Mid. 49 ~ SISVA S3SYA UTAH--------------------- Page Five Draper Residents Buy Bonds and Stamps Readily Kearns Soldiers To Give Program For Murray USO Proof that the students of the Draper schools, and residents of that community, are really cooperating in the war effort, is shown by the large amount of war bonds and stamps sold . at a special bond and stamp drive, conducted Tuesday of last week by the students of Draper junior high school and members of the faculty. A total of $396.00 in war stamps was sold during the day, as well as $'770 in war bonds, making a total of $1166.00 for a single day, according to Reid Beck, school principal. Under the sponsorship of the Murray Women's Club, a variety program will be given Saturday evening, November 28, at 8 p. m. in the Murray high school auditorium. The vaudeville show, under the direction of Corporal Hal Morris as master of ceremonies, includes on orchestra directed by Corporal Kenneth Burt, formerly with the Benny Goodma n orchestra; vocal solos by Ted Delay, formerly of the Chicago Civic Opera company and comedy relief will be furnished by Private George Moses and Private Benjamin Kusner, both of Hollywood·. Dynamic Spanish and Mexican folk dances will be executed by Private William Pena. Trumpet solos will be playe'd by Private Frank Levinn, a native of New York City. Sergeant George Smyrniotis of Chicago is a talented impersonator of today's leading figures, and is a former stock company actor. He is a welcome addition to any program. Baritone solos of unusual beauty will be supplied by Private Duane Crossley, a native of Michigan. Comedy vocal and piano solos will be given by Private John Payne, a native of Tennessee. Private ·Moro Gonzales, a fine artist and caricaturist, does lightning-speed portraits on an easel in a few seconds. Admission to the show is 50 cents, and proceeds will go to the Murray U.S.O. The general public is invited to attend. Frank Nelson Gets "Hodgson Hat" For Gridiron Work I Frank Nelson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Nelson of Lark, who is a former Bingham high school football star and now a classy University of Utah tailback, j.s the fourth Ute player to win the "Hodgson Hat" this season for outstanding grid 'performances. Frank scored three touchdowns -two on long runs-and passed to Chester Kim, of Sandy, for another, as the Indians won the last conference game and sewed up the lead in the conference race. Frank's mother is the former Miss Mary Graves of Sandy. Outdoor Xmas Lighting Is Banned by WPB The war production board has asked city officials, civic clubs, chambers of commerce, merchants and citizens generally to dispense with outdoor decorative lighting this Christmas, Leslie A. Miller, regional WPB director, reports. He pointed out the lighting requires large amounts of critical materials, vital electricity and manpower. The next meeting of the Les Bonnis Ami Theta Rho Girls club No. 4 of Sandy will be held Monday, Nov. 30, at 7:30 p.m. at the home of the sponsor, Mrs. T. W. Nicholl, at her home in East Sandy, it has been announced. A good attendance is desired. Classified advertisements are small but they have power to produce sales. Try one if you have something to sell, or want to buy something. The average family with an income of $2,000 last year ate 151.3 pounds of meat per person. This is slightly more than the quota to be set for each person next January. By FRANCES PECJt Heinz Home Institute New Ideas for Outdoor Meals When you're planning the menu for a campfire picnic, the choice of a meat is a simple matter, usually steak, wieners, hamburgers or fresh-cau~ht fish. But when it comes to the rest of the menu a little more thought is necessary. Though it is easy to decide on fried potatoes and a salad topped off with fruit and let it go at that, variety in picnic meals is a simple matter if you make use of the dif- Beans 'n Wieners Dinner Wieners Broiled on a Stick Oven-Baked Beans, Any Style Buttered Hard Rolls Cabbage and Green Pepper Salad Peach Tart Campfire Fish Dinner Fried Fresh-Caught Fish Cooked Macaroni in Cream Sauce with Cheese Cross-Cut Sweet Pickles Tomato Slices Whole Wheat Sandwiches ferent prepared foods on your groFresh Cherries and Bluebe~·ries cer's shelves. Cookies Coffee For example, everyone would enjoy prepared spaghetti in tomato sauce instead of the usual fried potatoes. The racy tomato-andcheese flavor of the sauce combines delightfully with the lightly smoky flavors of camp-fire-cooked meats. ~~~?4 When you have a good fish catch to serve, the cooked macaroni in Proud Pudding cream sauce with cheese which If you are one who holds your comes prepared in cans has just breath time you make corn the right nippiness to set off the pudding,every or doesn't make it just fish's fresh-caught taste. because you're afraid it might fall, Prepared oven-baked bea.ns-all you will be glad for this new refour kinds of them-are another cipe that doesn't allow any calagood reason you don't want to for- mities. The crisp, golden-brown get the can opener when you go breakfast cereals known as rice on an outing. flakes are the ingredient that preThe following menus give you vents such goings-on. clever ideas for different things to Corn Pudding do with campfire meals: CombineBroiled Steak Dinners 1 No. 2 can cream-style corn 2 eggs, slightly beaten. Broiled Cube Steaks Cooked Spaghetti in Tomato Sauce Toss1 cup rice flakes Fresh Cucumber Pickle in-Celery Sticks 3 tablespoons butter, melted. Toasted Rolls Stir into corn mixture witk-Fresh Peaches Toasted Marshmallow and Graham % teaspoon salt. Cracker Dessert Pour into a well-greased baking dish and bake in a moderate oven (Roast marshmallows and eat (350° F.) 40 minutes. Serves 5. between graham crackers) P. c. PHONE MID. 252 ' ~MARKET~ liTHE OLD RELIABLE CREDIT STORE" WE DELIVER Specials for Wed., Fri., & Sat., Nov. 25-27-28 Margaret turned off the humming vacuum cleaner, and straightened the slipcovers of the armchair and the daybed that she had pushed up to go over the rug. Then she stood quite still in the doorway and looked at the small bedroom with its southern exposure. It was as neat and impersonal as a pin. It might never have been lived in. The door stood open on the clean, bare closet. There was not a pennant, not a team picture, not even so much as an old Arithmetic book left to show whose room it had once been. Margaret stared at the walls, the furniture, anddeeply, slowly, she real· ized that no matter what lodgers with their own tr.inkets and pictures might occupy It, she would always see it the old way. It was the old way that she saw it now. A pair of hard-worn gray pants lay on the floor where they had been dropped. Three baseball bats were stacked with a fishing rod in the corner. A battered red cap with a letter on it lay on the bed. And through the bed as though it were transparent, Margaret saw another bed, smaner 0 and with high slatted sides. She put the vacuum cleaner away and went down to her desk in the sitting-room. She took the fifteen dollars rent that the newl lodger had paid that morning in1 advance for the room, and added· to it, from her purse, three dol-, Iars and seventy-five cents more. Then she drew out a sheet of paper and began to write on it, slowly, gravely. "To buy a bond to help train a young man to replace Don, Jr.killed on June 6th in the Battle of Midway." (Letter from an actual communication In the .files of the Treasury Department.) • * .. Help our boys. Make certain the wage earner of the family joins a payroll savings plan and tops that 10% by New Year's! U.S. Treasury Departmetd SUGAR. 10 pounds ··-----···········-···-······-··67c BUTTER. First Quality. pound ................54c MILK, Popular Brands. 4 tall cah:s•........ 35c BEST FOODS MAYONNAISE. qt. bot. 49c NALLEY SALAD DRESSING. qt. jar•.... 39c MARKET VALUE SALAD DRESS•• qt. 25c MIXED NUTS. no peanuts, 2 lbs......... ... 69c PUMPKIN, Rosedale. 2 lqe. cans_ ......... 29c. FANCY MIXED CAKES. lb. -··-··-·-·-····-·-29c CRISCO or SNOWDRIFT, 3 lb. can ...... 7lc JOLLY TIME POP CORN, can ................ l4c MOR ZIP POP CORN. can -··-·-··-··········-lOc CELERY, fancy large stalks, each .CELERY, jumbo size stalk, each NEW CARROTS, 2 bunches --······-···--····15c OLD CARROTS, pound ·-····-······-····---··--···Sc TURNIPS. pound .-·····-············---··---·-···--·--·5c BRUSSELS SPROUTS. lb. -·---···-~------··-·-·18c PARSNIPS, pound ··-·-----····-·-··-·-······-········Sc YAMS and SWEET POTATOES 3 lhs. 25c • ORANGES, all • • • 10e 4e LETTUCE, large California. each .......... lSc JONATHAN APPLES, lb. ---··-···-··-···-·-··-····Sc CABBAGE, pound -·-·--·---····---·-··-···-····-··---5c WHITE DELICIOUS APPLES. 3 lbs. ______ 25c ROMAN BEAUTY APPLES, 3 lbs.........25c GRAPES, 2 pounds .·-·-·-·-·········-···----······25c pound SIZeS, PEAS, Spring Garden. "new stock." can ........................................ 17c PEAS, Pleasant Grov ~. can .................... llc CORN. White Whole Kernel. can ........ l2c IRISH POTATOES. diced. can --····-·---····-9c DICED BEETS. can ··----··-··-···-·---··-·--··-·---·lOc • • • • • • 9e PEAS & CARROTS, can ·---···············-··-··-15c MIXED VEGETABLES. ·can ···---··-····-······15c MOLASSES, Br'er Rabbit, dark, bot. 22c Molasses. light Br'er Rabbit ·---·--···---·····25c FRUIT CAKE MIX, Radiant. pkg. ________ 39c CRANBERRY SAUCE. can .................... ISc Q1111allil1ty TURKEYS, prime birds up to 16lbs~, lb. 45C COLORED ROASTERS . . . . . lb. 39C ROLLED PRIME Rm OF BEEF....... .lb. GROUND BEEF, ground fresh ....... .lb. SIRLOIN STEAK ···--·-·-·-········-····-····-··lb. PORK SAUSAGE ···-------··········--······-·lb. 38c 23c 35c 25c POT ROASTS, chuck cuts ............. Jb. POT ROASTS. round bone ........... .lb. MINCE MEAT. ···········-·····-··-· 2 lbs. for FRESH OYSTERS ·-·····-··--·-·--········· Pint 25c 29c 25c 53c |