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Show 4A SUNDAY j prT : . HERALDfSSf11- w r. : ; .,..... : Mature Parent Moose Women Women Will Republican One Entertain On Wednesday Enroll New Member Many of Qgr Actions Have, Overtones Of Lonel iness ; I , iiPrt ' s President Ernest L. Wilkinson, for Wednesday by the Republican of Brigham Young University, will Women's Club of Prove. be the guest speaker at an afterAll interested women are invited noon tea and program arranged to attend, said Mrs. M. B. Wallace, dub president. The event has been set for 2 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Monroe J. Paxman, 135 E. r 200 N., Provo. Mrs. Dallen1 R. Clark will furnish musical numbers and voting will be conducted; for new officers; A discussion will be held on plans for a luncheon to be given honorPLEASANT GROVE Mr. and ing Mrs. Richard Nixon, when she Mrs. J. Arza Adams of Manila and the vice president come i; to will be hosts at an open house in Provo during their campaign visits. Current officers who will be leavhonor of their son Dale and his their after the elections ing wife, the former Dollys Snbhr of include m posts to Mrs. Wallace, addition East Lansing, Mich., on Sept. 13, vice Paxman1, Mrs.; president, Mrs. from 6 to 9 p. m. at the Adams Fred and Mrs. Sown, secretary, home."' v; :d Newlyweds Invite Friends, Family To Social Fete Dean W. Payne, treasurer. i The young couple were married in Traverse City, Mich., in the early summer and both have been attending the Michigan The young State University. couple plan to return to school in Michigan next week. All friends and relatives are cordially invited to attend the open house and greet the young ' t .a, r i. - "in vwyA- -- 0R QUICK BREAKFAST If yours is a family, you cair slow them up and bolster their nutrition with these tasty wheat germ sweet rolls. Served with tomato juice and milk they assure lots of nutrition. all-arou- nd Sweet Rolls But Pep Into Anyone's Step Sweet rolls for breafcfast are standard fare in most of file cof fee d!rinking nations of the world, $nd eepially here la the United where too many of lis in- states " hreAk-- f dulge. in a five days of the week, whether. We jet it at name or In tbe;offtce . tfeuflding snack shop. are high Sweet Toiisi la l&dories and with their sugar topping foey'dio provide some but- it Jhk family persists in weft t:dre8if a$t "fare lyou jan fwlster theiri jtritfon with these IPeiiYour-Sle-p sweet rolls, made wheat wtth germ, which is rich in B yitamdns, iron, phosthe prptein, other essential nutriand phorus ents. If the rolls are served with tomato Juice for the A and C vitamins , and rnlk, for eakium, the family starts the day on the right food, if we can intend a pun. i The wheat germ sweet rolls ' texhave a moist, ture, and the raisins and confec- cctffee-and-ro- H at ; en-trg- y, - taoners' sugar frosting add a sweet-toot- h touch, which wM appeal particularly to the "cowboy coffee' drinkers in the home, that is,, the folks who drink, their coffee- - without cream or sugar. . In addition to serving as a com- plete breakfast, "the rolls, tomato juice and milk menu is ideal, too, for childrens' lunches, and the hometmaker, whether she has children or no, would do well to so indulge herself at noon time, rattier than skip eating in the 'face of household chores. piled-uQuick Breakfast Sweet Rolls VA cups sifted flour teaspoon salt 4 teaspoons baking powder Vz, teaspoon cream of tartar 2 r teaspoons sugar " p all-purp- ose cup wheat germ cup shortening a cup milk Sift flour, salt, baking powder, cream of tartar and sugar together. Stir in wheat germ. Cut in shortening until mixture resembles coarse corn meal. All milk all at once and stir with fork just until mixed. Turn out on lightly floured pastry board or cJoth and roll or pat into oblong about 7" x 12". Brush, with melted butter and sprinkle with mixture of 2 tablespoons sugar, Vz teaspoon cinnamon, , Y cup raisins. Roll up as for jelly roll, beginning at the wide Vz side. Seal well. Cut in slices. Bake in greased muffin cups at 8-- 10 degrees F., about 425 10 minutes. Drizzle confectioners' sugar frost ihg over tops while still warm. - s ke SGrencejHeads Off Tragedy ' (UiPI) PHIEA!D(EXJP!HIEA McQrath owes her normalcy to brownish powder that doesn't ameU or taste jvery good. H has been the mainstay of the three-yea- r oldfs diet ever , since was five weeks old. the Kammy of jDenver, Colo.,, suffers from an uncommon disease' Tips For Teens eila;C9;Ls,.$Uiers from;P!U. I . : . nimber of ways; She 'must con sume one pound of it weekly. Her mother sometimes adds oil of peppermint to it, sometime she makes a dough, and fries or bakes patties, and sometimes she mixes it .. with soft drinks or makes . it into a jelly roll topped with a few auts; The big question in' the f ath house now is how long must Kammy continue to take the brown Wedding, Reception, Trip, All Require Their Sha re By DOROTHEA M. BROOKS United Press International NEW YORK (UPI) Try to cost jof getthe down average pin find there ting married and you'll no such thing is unless, of course, you go along with jthe recently, married young man who said "it takes all you've got," Ask any of the people whose Dustiness is weddings and all that goes with them and you'll et the same answer:, "Well, it all depends. . . ." It depends, of course, on what "getting married" means to each j couple. It is to be a simple ceremony with the bride in her going away outfit and just best friends to stand or a church up for the pair with the bride gowned in wedding the dress of a lifetime, a procession of attendants and all the trim- great majority spent less than -- gift-give- , ... cars?';; Ans. At 16 of your parents approve of the boy, if he drives carefully, if your parents know where . owl-peop- gh OFF OK. ANY Permanent Wave ; nly ---O- , INCLUDES Hair GRETA 6 Weeks 4 LESSONS IK'S BEAUTY SALON 775 NO. STATE OREM . AC Eye-- FR HART BROS. 706 SOUTH STATE ft: OREM . s AC ... !,.1v,:'v. -- ,) t Wo men s Beauty Tips tones change with the Secret to use of a mirror: Bt years. Take that factor into con sideration when dyeing tjhe hair. Be prepared to improve your poor points. Banish the irritations of the day from your mind at fjedtime. And take a good, relaxing flage poor posture entirely The two together "Wear" proper posture as part of your ensemble. help bring restful sleep.! Skin I ALL llWIkEISS ' i 'V! - . - MIXED MEN MEN 71 & LADIES Leagues are now. being formed for this coming winter season. We have new handicap leagues for the begin ners. No previous league bowling experience 1s neces-w- e have morning leagues, afternoon sary. For the ladies leagues. For the leagues (free baby sitting) men evening leagues at 6r30 or 9 p. m. For the children a league Saturday morning at 9:30 and-evenin- g DROP IN OR GIVE US A CALL ON THE TELEPHONE, FR 3-18- 63 REGMt RE 11 80 NORTi UNIVERSITY AVENUE UTAH PflOVO PORTER-WALTO- N TOD-CO- T ! '.. a BUY CFfOCT omt. j Use of Spreader, Roller and Seeders vosi va AS NANMaONiNa itsvsx tsa Shrubs rmu A HAND IRONER AN IRONRIT- E- BE - See us for Your Landscaping Needs Shade Trees Evergreens --r Ready to Plant H(2llnldlssp APPLIANCE Co. Df rf NO ON GUI !!'.'' PEAT MOSS AUTOMATIC IRONEfl KZS ' ..... FERTILIZERS rortriH 1850 North URVta " ' & U.S. Highway No. 91 (Halfway up Orem Hill) PHONE FR r " 9 TO 1 6 LADIES i ' , GET A BETTER START AND FASTER GROWTH WITH - ,.: m YOU CAN 54 and neck. If you are unaccustomed to taking exercise of any kind, your body shows it. Your movements are stiff and jerky, your walk most likely is awkward. For muscles respond to exercise, be it a daily walk, tennis, swimming or spot ex- ' DON'T 17 yourself. Probably you've neglected your necK entirely when you creamed your face at night. For the truth is that your neck needs care and exercise in order to prevent that creased or scraggly look. Letting your head drop forward, then rolling It right, back,-lef- t and down again is a help. Do this 20 rimes a day. Creaming your neck nightly is another help. Holding your head high and looking up, not oown, as you walk Is another im mense help. In the interests of a pretty neck and good posture, toss your pillow onto a chair each night and learn to sleep flat. A pillow merely tilts your head forward and carves a few more wrinkles into your chin I; try CO. .J , AND MUSIC MUSIC ' i vj change. j "They wilt be so rapid and dramatic ' that the pace today wil seem like, the; pony express com pared with an ICBM taking off from a launching pad. Parents should encourage their children to explore and master the world aroilnd them," he said. kson: $6950? Lovely Neckline Requires Work, Daily Interest CHANGE IN STORE j UniBURLINGTON, Vt. (UPI) Velrmont of human relations versity expert Dr. Dalton Vernon saysi "in the next 50 years our children iwill be caught up in a mighty tide of AS Wurlitzer Organs , 5-- 11 :. ng (All lights reserved, Newspaper Euterprise Assn.) . "jjiivery Included Rental may be applied toward purchase f The woman who gets some exercise every day is the one who swings along looking lithe and limber. She doesn't, of course, think up excuses for taking the car when she has an errand to run. She doesn't think that housework is the sole answer to exercise despite all those impressive figures about how much mileage the housewife racks up In one day. She doesn't glue herself, to the TV set the year around. She does make exercise a daily part of her total program for last- - Hart 20 m. lone-givi- Finding a blind person with need of a Seeing-Ey- e dog was? the main topic of discussion during the Omega Auxiliary meeting' j Wednesday evening. Mrs. Ofliver Brannam, past vice president presided- at the meeting. She read a letter from the International Guiding Eyes Incorporation of Nojjth Hollywood, Calif. The dogs are given to the person free of charge, she said, and both ing good looks. dog and recipient take training ,i courses. The Union Label week, Sept. was also stressed. The next meeting will be held at the home jof Mrs. Robert Lucas, Orem, on Sept. 22. -r- CLIP THIS AD FORZZT self-estee- ercises. Guide Dogs matter o? H so-and- -sp rs Auxiliary Mee ts On Dur-stin- y so-and-s- o's : .'-.'- - M $200 j j ? j i the newlyweds in punch, nibble dainty sandwiches and wredding or will the full complecake ment of guests enjoy lavish food and drink and dance to the music of a society orchestra? Will the honeytmooners take off for a week in the mountains or six weeks in Europe? Will, their first home be- a small apartment furnished with! .combined bachelor quarter leftovers, or a comgifts and ingenuity plete to the last ashtry house in the suburbs? Any one of the unlimited number of possible variations can be "the" answer at a cost of a few hundred to thousands of dollars. Whatever the cost to the Individuals involved, marriages are big business an estimated $23j billion in 1959 spent for goods and servthe wheel) and if it doesn't lead ices mat would not otherwise have to necking.: Most girls agree that been bought. it's better not to kiss on the first Since "bdg business," of course, date; it makes sense to wait until requires statistics, averages, and and it projections, Baten, Barton, you know him better e makes a better impression. and Osborn, a Madison Ave(For help with personal prob- nue advertising firm, set its marlems, write to Elinor Williams at keting experts to work on the subthis paper. As many letters as pos- ject recently. They came up with sible, will be answered in this some figures on "The Bridal Marcolumn). ket" that makes interesting reading - whether or not they are typical of brides in general, Each marriage there "were 1,445,000 in 1958 and there are expected to be 2,250,000 annually by 1965 - generates a demand for about $15,000 worth of goods and services for apartments, houses, furniture, appliances, clothing, jewelry, automobiles and myriad other items. . Of that $15,000 average, $11,000 goes into the cost of the dwelling unit itself while $1,000 ;is spent on the engagement and wedding and the balance represents the average estimated cost of setting up the household, with outlays for furniture, appliances and the like. Putting first things first, the surOne of the weirdest fashions vey found some 75 per cent jof encame out! of London in 1938. gaged girls sported the traditional Furriers were heralding a new ring which cost on the average th coat made up of over $200. mouse skins. It took about 400 Practically all brides had acskins to make the coat. The cost was about $350 less if quired a trousseau for their wedding but, perhops surprisingly, the you caught your own mice. encyclopedia Britannic you go, and who is with you . . . and if you don't try to join the le and stay out too late. Come home.on time.1 : j full-lengpowder. ttiink Do Elinor: "Dear Q. you W. Streamer, of the Charles Pr. ' it is all right for a boy to put nis University of "Colorado Medical arm around a giri on their first School, said he doesn't know 16." am date? I there isj some evidence that Ans. No harm in if if it Isn't Kammy can abandon the medicine In in a theater, if it isn't as public, when she is jabout five years old. in a car (he needs both hands on On the other hand, Dr. Streamer aid some experts "feel the diet must be contired for life." The Bros. Music Co. Across from Scera Theater medicine costs; $25 a pound. Mc-G- ;. . room furniture, refrigerator, automobile, washing machine, dinjptte set, television, radio and rugs are most necessary for newlyweds. j The ' traditional honeymoon, according to the survey, represents a substantial $235 million market, annually, with 66 per cent of U. S. honeymoon - couples spending an f average of $237 for a week. BBDO, culling its Mormaition from the Census Bureau and other government sources, bank economists and numerous publications, stuck closely to the bridal market, leaving for other studies the baby market and the teenage market, the expenses of which, nevertheless, are to be reckoned with in any consideration of .the .cost of getting married. t ... ':'; ' j For Jealous Girlfriend By ELINOR WILLIAMS Q. - "Dear Elinor: What can a giri do in this case? A certain boy in my class likes me, but one of "my best friends wont; leave him ' alone and she " is jealous of me when he is around. Should I drop him a a friend or not?" Ans. If you,' droo your boyfriend every time another girl is jealous, you'll .be Miss No-Da-te of 1960, because someone is almost always jealous It seems to be human nature. You have a right to have' him;, for ' a friend whether she's jealous or hot she's . the one who is out of line and needs to adjust her thinking, not you. So try to keep, them both as friends separately. Keep them apart and don't try to be with both at the same time. Avoid talking about him to her, too. "Dear Miss Williams: At Q. what age are girls usually allowed to start going out with boys An ' v-.. And, cheering to prospective husbands, only 9j per cent of the brides queried looked forward to spending more than they did as single girls. The remaining 91 per cent was; divided evenly between those ijvho By ALICIA HART " figured on spending less. Beauty Editor The average bride, it seems, Ire- Newspaper Enterprise Assn. ceives $1,003 in wedding gifts, and The way you hold your head has most of these, gifts are not exactly a good deal to do with the kind of surprise since by means of hints neck you have. If your neck is "the creased and and bridal gift registries wrinkly, chances are bride generally manages to let very good that you've spent lots of know exactly what time digging your chin into like. In order of importance, coat collar, looking down as your they'd the average brides feels that bed- walk and generally building upyoua room furniture, linens, liting store of lines for j Don 't Drop Boyfriend ' But it tirash't diagnosed in time. Sheila is 'iq a state home for retarded children. . laving been warned, by their frperience . with Sheila, Kammy's parents, Richard and Mary Catharine McGrathj and Kammy's doctor were ready. By the third day of Kammy's lite the warning signs began to-- appear. v r c When Kammy was five weeks old she began jtaking the brownish powder. Called Ketonil, the powder is .produced by Merck- - Sharp c Dohme. It was developed by Dr. E. E. Howe o the chemical firm and his reseacL associates. The medicine ; is fed to Kammy in a j - -- united States. . PKU prevents the body from icetabolizing one of the amino acids. Thus, the supply of acid accumulates, in the blood, apparently txerting a' jtoxic effect , on the brain. . f, $ome children with PfEU become mentally retarded; medical scien? tists have found: ,'. Kanimy has an older sister, enter-tamin- Will family and intimates toast -4- Kam-iriy phenylketonuria,' known as PKU.' The disorder appears in one to two per cent of all babies born in the couple. mings? ' ' i . 4 j whole-wheat4i- The wives of members of jthe g Elks dub ar;e invited to an evening which wul mark the opening jof the season for the Ladies of Elks. The entertainment will be held in the new Starlit Lounge at the Elks Home on Wednesday, Sept. 14. A social hour will begin ait 7 on a tired look. Vz co-work- Lovely New Lounge Is Site For Ladies of Elks Social American women have been oversold on the notion that it's possible to make one dress look like six by changing beads and belt. It isn't. For the dress takes TJhese Delicious I . ; - ceremonies Enrollment for Mrs. Muriel Lawrence is on vacation. This Is the fourth of six Women of the Moose was held Thursday evening under the direc articles by psychologist Div Rollo May which will appear during her tion of Mrs. Arnold Wilkins, senior absence. They are taken Ifrom Dr. May's "Man's Search for Himself' and reprinted by permission of th,e publisher. Copyright; regent. y, 1953, by W. W. Norton and Co., Inc. It was the publicity chapter BY DR. ROLLO MAY night. Mrs. Herman Bray was enA of characteristic modern people Is loneiiaess. She rolled as a new an omniipojteni; and painful threat to many persons It is such was sponsored by Mrs. Carlyle that they have little conception of the positive values of solitude Lewis. ; Following the ceremonies re- and even at times are vejy frightened of being alone. The cause Is not difficult to discover. When a person does not freshments were served to the coknow the their and , with any , inner ebnjyiction what he wants or what he feels; workers partners by when In a period of crisis, he. becomes aware of the fact that the publicity committee. to conventional desires and goals he had been taughtto follow no The committee also explained members their project for' the year longer bring him security Jor give him any sense of direction, when of collecting clean rags and selling he feels an inner void wfhile be stands amid the outer .confusion "'! them. of upheavals in his socifetyi he senses danger; rand his natural The College of Regents then an- reaction is to look around for other people. They, he hopes, will nounced their special enrollment give him the sense of direction; some comfort in the knowledge that ' Light set for Thursday, Sept. 15. he is not alone In his fright. In the daily experience of most of us, the fear of being alone may not crop up in intense form very often. But It may show itself in subtle thoughts which pop up to remind us a when we were not invited to pa-tthat someone else likes us even if to us or tell that" we were successful and popular doesn't; at some time in the past) Often this reassuring proces is so automatic that we are not aware of it, but only of the ensuing comfort to our Social acceptance has so much power because it "holds the p.m. after which games and the ings of loneliness at hay A person is surrounded by comfortable serving of dinner will highlight the warmth; he is merged In the group. He temporarily loses his evening. liness but at the price of up his identity in his own right! Reservations may be made by He renounces the one thing which would get him constructively calling Mrs. Ralph Lasky. AC over the loneliness in the' long run the developing of his own inner- before Tuesday. An invitation is resources, strength and sense ... of direction. extended to wives of all Elks and The fear of being alone derives much of its terror from ouf each wife is asked to bring her anxiety lest we lose our awareness of ourselves. identification card. If people contemplate being alone for longistf periods of time The officers of the Ladies of without anyone to talk toj or any radio to inject noise into the air, Elks also announce that regular they are generally afraid that they would be at "loose ends," would meetings will be held on the. first lose the boundaries for themselves with nothing to bump up against, Wednesday of every month and a to define them. modern nothing Many people have gone so far in visit made to the Utah State Hoson others their for their dependence feeling of reality that they ar pital on the third Thursday of afraid that without it would lose the sense of their own exist they each month. .' enee.- 4-10- 44 ! ' |