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Show 2A Sunday Herald DUTB10'1968 ;.; aw By POLLY CRAMER DEAR POLLY Mary could! make a Christmas tree on a holiday mural and decorate it with her earrings. Use1 ntiite felt as a background and then apply a green felt tree cutout smaller than the white ground. Glue or sew on all these "precious stmes" as you would put ckxo ations on a tree. This will be beautiful to hang during the holiday season. NAOMI j v - f i d ' ' DEAR POLLY -- Mary could use her odd earrings for trimming Christmas tree balls. Use Styrofoam balls of many sizes and insert pipe cleaners for hooks. Cover the balls with pretty net, velvet ribbon, etc., then push the earrings into the ball with straight pins. Sequins, beads, etc., could also be worked into the designs. Just let your imagination run riot and you will have some of the most beautiful but inexpensive ornaments imaginable. MRS. L. B. c V " " An autumn theme was chosen for decoration of tables Monday evening, when Beta Cultus Club members met tor their opening social, held at Elliott's Cafe could be made belt a irto rings Provo. in that would add a custom look to Ida Reece, retiring president, a simple, ready-mad- e dress. welcomed members and after POLLY turned DEAR POLLY- -I have a knit preliminary remarks, over to Wanda Huff, the gavel top with a nylon zipper in the back that buckles up. I have newly elected president. Mrs. tried pulling it and ironing it Reece gave a tribute to Myrtis down but nothing seems to work. Jacobs, a member who died re How can I flatten this zipper? cently. Mrs. Jacobs had held every office in the club, and JUDY had also served as a district Spot in Christmas Decor r I Pay son Women s Clubs Begin New Season Odd Earrings Find Useful .(!, fi - fPOHs Pointers . ' ,i '(-- . THE ETT1E LEE HOMES received a welcome gift DEAR POLLY- -I once saw a of $800 today, representing cash proceeds from the Utah Federation of Music Clubs choral concert at mirror wtih a lovely round the Provo Tabernacle. Here, Mrs. Victor J. Bird, frame which was covered with She and Mrs. Eugene Hales odd earrings that had been : eeated, writes check. for the fiued on to cover the entire of Spanish Fork, left, were for the frame.-- A CONSTANT HEAD treasurer is concert. Victor J. Bird, right, ER . Ettie Lee Homes project. Besides the cash, the J homes have received through the efforts of the DEAR POLLY- -If Mary's odd - music clubs about 5700 in furniture, musical instru- earrings are of good metals, ments, and other items. she could have a jeweler re. Yon will receive a dollar If 'officer. Mrs. Reece noted club prog Polly uses your favorite idea, Polly's Frobietn jects during the past year as or solution to a problem. Write follows: the Harvest Days float Polly In care of The Daily entered by the club, donations to the Payson City Hospital Herald. ($100) and to the band uniform Hava an attractive, well-ru- n home and with far less effort. fund ($25) as well as an amount Profit from the hundreds of to the park pond project. The shortcuts in club has also donated a blue Polly's new book. To get it spruce tree to Gladstan Golf send name, address with zip Course. A humorous code, and 75 cents (in coins or program was check) to POLLY'S presented under direction of POINTERS, The Daily Grace Wightnan with Lyle Herald, P.O. Box 4958, Chicago, Coon reading poems pertaining 111. 60680. to the past club days and Ruth home-makin- trled-and-test- HOME-MAKIN- G future plans. A question and The bell ringers, he said are answer period followed his for- the persons who get things done. He advised his listeners to carry mal talk. an- a fair load and enjoy the priviMrs. Faye Mattinson nounced the coming "Three leges of association with other He said, "If you don't Days in Fall" program sched- persons. to succeed you will fail." plan 31 at Oct. for uled Brigham Mrs. Sheets, retiring presiYoung University. dent, turned the gravel over to The club voted to purchase a the new president, Mrs. Mary room in th: for a television set Jeppson, at the close of the Payson City Hospital after Mrs. meeting. Refreshments were Jack Provstgaard presented served by Florence Wride and the problem before members. Rosamonde Ballard. Mrs. Douglas Holt, president, Reece, Lyle Coon, telephone conducted the meeting. Recommittee; Ruth Walton, par freshments were served to Marie Taylor, about 24 guests. liamentarian; historian and reporter; Alice Is Peery, color bearer. Cultus Club memPAYSON Sheila Meriweather was pre bers met recently at the home By sented as a new member. of Mrs. Leland Sheets in where Roy Broadbent, The Jaycee Wives spent an PAYSOW-Rus- sell Stansfield, Payson banker, wa guest evening sewing for a bazaar superintendent of Nebo School speaker for the day. project in November at a meetDistrict, was guest speaker at Mr. Broadbent spoke on the ing Tuesday night at the home a meeting of Junior Cultus Club, satisfaction to be gained from of Mrs. Jerry Denier. held at the home of Mrs. Bob personal and social activities, Mrs. Denier was chiirman of Phelps. Mrs. Rex Mendenhall through community and civic the meeting, with Mrs. Larry was assisting hostess. activities. He said people might Crickenberger acting as Mr. Stansfield mentioned ac- be placed in four categories: complishments and probkus the watchers, the complainers, America's first bicycle factoofficials of the the wishers and the bell confronting school district. He also outlined ry was established in 1877. directed members in reading jokes suitable to individual club members. Erma Fech distributed programs for the year. Officers for the new year are: Mrs. Huff, president; Jeanne Lofgran, vice president; Sally P e e r y, secretary-treasureGrace Wightman, social chairman; Lyle Childs, project chairman; Erma Fech, program chairman; Mable Montague, civic chairman; Ida Walton r; Bazaar Project Ben-j?.rri- n, en Provoan Is Named To IFavorite Food for 1 By JEANNE LESEM UPI Food Editor do NEW YORK (UPI)-W- hat you think is America's favorite a looa: not hamburgers, hot dogs J No, take-ou- t, ready-cooke- r pizza. Chicken outsells each them by substantial percentages in every area of the United States, according to a survey by JYoble-Dur- y and Associates. The eurvey showed that chicken's if highest popularity rating as take-ou- t item is in not the south tut the midwest, where it Outsells both hamburger and about 60 per cent, Sizza by 96 per cent of the In the Interviewed Jwrsons midwest reported buying it. - The study, made for Kentucky Tried that Chicken take-ou- t, Corp., ready-cooke- showed d chicken outsold pizza in the Eastern United States by 37.1 per cent and hamburgers by 54 5 per cent. In the south, ran second to hamburger thicken by nearly 31 per cent, foods of imporseafood in the iast. barbecued meats in the pouth and Chinese food in the pther tance take-ou- loop or ring, then hang it on a matching metal chain and have a beautiful pendant necklace. If they are of the inexpensive costume kind, she could remove Top Office fake-Out- ? t move the shank from a particularly lovely one and apply a t include west. Chicken Boom t This booming fried chicken franchising Industry Is only bout one generation old. It was torn in the 1950s when Harland Sanders, then 65, had to close his successful restaurant when a highway route was moved. Sanders' cafe had stood at Corbin, Ky., on a main route to Florida and the Great Smoky fountains National Park. Undaunted, he took his car, bis pressure cooker and his Special seasoning blend and set ot t to introduce his pressure, tried product to restaurants, in return for a nickel on each order of chicken sold. I "It was quite a struggle," he aid in an interview here. "I used my H'6 social security fheck for gas, and slept in the ear most of the time. I "I'd always ask to fry chicken for tl restaurant man and his emoloves. 'Nobody ever complained about my chicken,' he'd av. What helped me was when penole tasted the chicken." Sanders' Kentucky Today. Fried Chiiken Corp, Is the biggest in an Increasingly competitive field. It has an estimated 1.800 outlets throughput the world, including the 50 talcs. Australia, Europe, the Caribbean and Japan. It also i. the U.S. fifth largest prepared lord operation in dollar value, head of It are. In this order, the U.S. Army. Marriott Corp.. Pie U.S. Navy and the US. of Department Agriculture School Lunch Troeram. f Instead of pennies, natives of Surinam (formerly Dutch Guiana) like to dive for bars of oap, tossed Into the river by cruise ship passengers. litre ier Ui tmy LAVA LAMPS of the clips or shanks herself and apply pin backs, such as used Mrs. J. Elmer (Ella) Jacob-se- n by those who make shell or of Provo has been elected plastic jewerly. They can be to national first vice president bought at hobby shops.-M- RS. of the National Service Star P. S. B. Legion. The appointment came POLLY I hive a at a convention of the national HEAR table-size- d small, organization held recently at Christmas tree which is entireIndiana, Pa. decorated with odd brooches, Mrs. Jacobsen, who has been ly buttons, earrings and beads. serving as second national were put on a foam They was accompanied to - shaped base with pyramid the convention by Mrs. W. R, and small hair straight (Margaret) Carter, a past na- pins. I ampuis now saving jewelry tional president of the legion to make a mate for it. and by Mrs. Anna Allcock, To scrape gum or any other of the Salt Lake Chappresident sticky substance off my linole:sr, both of Salt Lake City. During the proceedings. Mrs, um, I use an Carter was named national or- Mason jar lid. Place it flat and work the sharp edge under the ganizer and Mrs. Allcock elect sticky substance.V. J. ed to regional director. CarMrs. Jacobs and Mrs. DEAR GIRLS Alice wrote ter were al? the weekend that she removes the backs nad guests of the from odd earrings with pliers tional president, Mrs. C. J. and then uses them to decorate (Bertha) Blundo at her home in gifts, such as a hand mirror, Newcastle, Pa. an easel-typ- e picture frame, on The delegates, who traveled bottles and on belts. The belt by air to the meetings, report idea caught my eye. that next year's convention will Only a few days ago I ad be held at Cincinnati, 0. mired a dress made of pleated white silk with no trimming-j- ust a jeweled belt. That one had many differ Buys Still ent stones, colors and no set ear design so Mary's I. M0V5 (WANT! - awry-name- three-inch-wi- 50-o- USDA's Consumer and Mark Service reports that weekend shoppers will find unusually good supplies of meat and poultry and better than usual supplies of fresh vegetables and some fresh fruits at food stores and supermarkets. Again heading the list as the most abundant and available steaks and ground beef. Almost every pork item is featured this week with roasts ud chops eting list the Other pork bacon, ham, smoked picnics, and sparenbs, and Boston butts in some areas. Fish buys to watch for are canned pink salmon and fresh meats are broiler-frychickens fish fillets and steaks, according and turkeys. The beef Items in to the U.S. Department of the good supply are roasts and Interior. heading are features er MATTRESS SALE ORTHOPEDIC SLEEP SETS TEN-YEA- GUARANTEE R KING SIZE How can anything be as good as cash? By being converted into cash . . . that's how! The typewriter you no longer use . . . and any ol the dozens of other unused items in your home are easily converted into cash when you advertise them for ... sale in a Daily Herald Want Ad. Hvy Dtmatlt OtiihtJ Mattm. 1 Mvttfclnf 11 Spriftfi. $30000 Now $1AOOO I Vi7 Only. QUEEN SIZE ATTINTlOM Apartment House Owners 1 SPECIAL PRICES ON Ml MATTRSSKS and EOX SPRINGS ttnrti Mwry DaiMtk I MaHhint .t. IJ00 00 OviM MoWnM. N FvH tirina. $11000 I IT . Only n twin 'om Maftrtiwt ., $1 Ovflitl. 1W 00 .le Tfl-r- r OvamnH Vlu Trie g990 . FREE l.f M 44" IITIMATI TO MIUHD toui rmrM Mntitt NO OlllOATION Trrtni ArrmtH r BtnkAmf rtfirt-- W like r Btnktrl OVERMAN MATTRESS CO. It NORTH 100 WIST HERALD WANT ADS Twin or Full Size TWIN BED Utah Office Supply M E. CENTER, AM mm m Ti.uch-pdmir- Best Chicken, Turkey PHONI 371-304- 1 373-505- Planned - 0 Jaycee Wives |