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Show OPENINGS FOR YOUNG MEN IN INTELLIGENCE RESERVE ' Vacancies in the 6262 Military Intelligence Reserve are now open to high school students, veterans and college students, according to Capt, Chris S. Metos, public information officer for the unit. "Public Law 51 requires each young man to serve 8 years in the armed service, of which six must be spent in some reserve unit, Capt. Metos said. "Part, if not all of the required reserve time, can be served before entering the Army. Young men with a reserve obligation will find it advantageous to Joiiv the 6202 Military Intelligence Reserve, provided they possess the qualifications, Capt. Metos stated. Some of the advantages of joining were listed by Capt Metos. "By serving with the MI Re serve, the reservist obtains (1) familiarity with the Army; (2) he goes on active duty with the rank obtained in the reserve unit; (3) he will work in a specialized field of intelligence and he will (4) receive one days pay for each of the four meetings he will attend each month. The 6262 Military Intelligence Reserve is sponsored by the University of Utah and trains in many specialized fields, 'including edi- torial writing, order of battle, foreign languages and other subjects pertinent to the effective operation of the U. . S. Army Intelligence. To qualify for enlistment in the the applicant 6262 MI Reserve, must be over 17 years of age, a citizen of the United States and receive a satisfactory "clearance to handle secret documents. He must either be a veteran or make application before notification of physical examination by the Selective Service Board. "Reserve officer commissions may be obtained through the unit and the Military Intelligence Rephoto-interpreti- Welfare Dinner diction and the grave in the Memorial Park was dedicated by William E. Galley. Kaya-ville-Layt- on A NEEDLE AND THE EYES HAVE IT To Feature future years, said Capt. Metos. Further information about Military Intelligence Reserve and it functions may be obtained by calling Capt. Metos, telephone or by calling the Unit Instructor, MI Section, Fort Douglas, Major Llewelyn R. McKay, head of the Department of Languages, University of Utah, is commanding officer of the Unit Davis Coeds In USAC Spurs LOGAN Karen Draayer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Claude W. Draayer, Clearfield; Janice daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Goodfellow, Clearfield; Mary Lou Pitts, daugher of Mr. and Mrs. William V. Pitts, Clearfield; and Vauna Lee Gray, daughter of Mr. Good-fello- and Mrs. Dayle Gray, Layton, have been initiated into Spurs, honorary sophomore service organization at Utah State Agricultural College. Acting as alarm clocks, the old members of the Spurs roused the new members from bed at 5 a.m. as the first part of the Spur initiation. Later, breakfast was held at the LDS Institute on the Utah State campus. Initiation ceremonies following the breakfast were held in the faculty lounge in the Union building. At these ceremonies, the new members exchanged the spur they had been wearing around their necks for their spur pin. Hot chocolate and spudnuts made up the conclusion to the ceremonies. All are freshmen. Miss Draayer has a major in secretarial science; Miss Goodfellow, secretarial e, also. Miss Pitts is majoring in foods and Miss Gray is an elementary major. Kaysville, Davis County, Utah Thurs., May 12, 1955 P. 15 Indian Dancers LAYTON Outstanding entertainment 1b promised all who attend the annual welfare banquet at Layton Fourth Ward Friday, May 13. Bishop Delbert Hadfield announced that arrangements have been completed for the presentation of a group of , authentic American Indian students now attending Brigham , Young Univer20 Indian sity. Approximately students will arrive completely clad in their colorful native' costumes and present the entire program of Indian tribal dances. Among the group is one outstanding student who is reputed to be the Worlds Champion Indian Dancer. f The welfare dinner is being held this year to produce the share of welfare support designated to come from the Layton Fourth Ward in the form of a cash assessment as set forth by the directors of the over-a- ll church welfare pro- New Ways with Eggs Ry AllCl DINH0F7 rrs a vise cook vho makes use of plentiful foods, thus getting her money's worth and feeding her family well at the same time. Right now its eggs, so let's move Into the kitchen and whip together a fine luncheon or supper special to serve six. Tasty Eqq Dish . First, prepare dumplings by sifting 2 c. sifted flour, 4 tap. tap salt baking powder, and Into a mixing bowl. Add 1 beaten egg and enough milk to make a e. rather atlft batter about Mix thoroughly Drop into boiling salted water, and cook, closely covered, for 12 to 15 min. While dumplings are cooking, soft or medium-coo- k 6 eggs and remove shells. Also cook fresh or frozen asparagus In boiling, salted water until lender. Arrange the dumplings in the center of a large platter and arrange asparagus and eggs as a border. Serve with melted butter, and sprinkle with minced parsley and paprika. Fried Stuffed Eqqs , You might want to try a recipe for Fried 8tuffed Egga ( gram. It was felt that a greater percentage of members of the ward would participate in such a dinner aa compared to the past practice of donating a crop of sugar beets or other farm crops which represented the efforts of only a small fraction of the total waid mem. If0 CASEY gets an eyeful of things to come as Charles Buzine, 0, takes his shot of Salk polio vaccine at a parochial school in Philafriend, Charles cannot bear to delphia. In contrast to his wide-eye- d (International) watch, but after all. thats his own right arm. Bishop Paul Layton conducted services under the direction of Bis. hop C!i"tn Zollinger. Family prayer was offered by Sidney Stewart and Mrs. Sarah Funeral services Giles played prelude and postlude KAYSVILLE were conducted May 9 in the Secon- music. r d-Third Ward chapel for BarEugene Prigmore offered the bara Nance, 23 months old daugh- opening prayer, and two vocal ter of Mr. and Mrs. Wesley A. solos were presented by Ferral Nance, who was killed May 6 when Jorgensen. Speakers were Bishop struck bp a car backing from a Zollinger and Bishop Layton. ' Frank Cheney offered the bene driveway. FUNERAL HELD FOR. VICTIM OF ACCIDENT bership. According to Bishop Hadfield, an excellent dinner will be served between the hours of 5 and 7 p.h., with continuous service to allow those desiring to attend to come at their convenience. Family groups are urged to attend together. At 7:30 thf entire crowd will reassemble to enjoy the entertain- ment. All ward members will be personally contacted by appointed committeemen for purchase of tickets, but it is emphasized that You grow up the day you have any and all interested persons are serve. Army Reserve provides your first real laugh at yourself. cordially invited to attend. an excellence retirement plan for Ethel Barrymore sci-enc- enough pressure le keep them Intact Dip first Into beaten egg, then into bread crumbs and cook until golden brown in deep hot fat (360-27- 5 F.) Drain on soft paper and serve Immediately either on creamed spinach or creamed broccoli, or serve as side dish with tartar sauce or tomato sauca Deviled Eqqa hi Tomato Sauce Deviled eggs In tomato sauce Is another useful luncheon or supper dish just now, since tt Is fight yet hearty Cut 4 eggs In halves Remove c. yolks and mash. 8aut4 chopped mushrooms and tbsp. minced parsley In tbsp. butter until tender. Combine with egg yolks, 2 tbsp. chill sauce, salt and pepper to taste. Refill the whites with mixture. Place la baking To serve 6. halve, lengthwise, 6 hard-cookeggs, separating yolks from whites and pressing yolks through a sieve. Add 5 finely chopped and pounded anchovies, Vk e. soft bread crumbs, white pepper to taste and 2tk tbsp. melted butter with enough heavy cream to make mixture aoft enough to handle. Use to fill up cavities from which yolks were removed. Place the egg halves firmly together, but using only ed tCvrlskt hard-cook- ed a cooked todish, cover with matoes and 2 tbsp. grated cheese. Bake in moderate oven until dish Is thoroughly heated through. 8ervesl Make Your Own Noodle Want to try making your own noodles just as grandmother used, to do? For enough egg noodles to serve ft. beat 1 egg slightly. Add Vk tsp. salt and about a of Dour, enough to make a stiff dough. Knead well and let stand, covered, for Vi hr. Roll out paper-th- in and spread on a doth to dry. The dough must not be sticky nor brittle Then roll out like jelly roll end slice across the roll Into fins strips Spread out to dry thoroughly. When dry. drop Into boiling salted water, and cook about 10 min. Serve Immediately. taa.1 IMS Klae MIL mMSEt State Jaycee Meet to Hear Family changes N vacation reservation by telephone . . . saves 35 . jf This family had paid $35 as a deposit on an apartment at a summer resort At the last moment, the reservations had to he shifted to a later date because 'of a change in the bus-- 1 bands vacation plans. He called the rental agent by Long Distance, explained the circumstances and reached agreement that the money would apply to a later period. For this family, here was proof that telephone service doesnt I cost it pays! . This is only one of many ways the telephone can save you money, valuable time and . trouble, too. So use it often let it work for you. AreiCt there some calls you should make right now? . Nat'l President Several SALT LAKE CITY hundred members . of. the Utah Junior Chamber of Commerce will convene at the Union Building, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Thursday, 8 p.m May 12, to hear an address by E. LaMar Buckner, national president of the U. S. Junior Chamber of Commerce. Mr. Buckner, a young insurance executive from Ogden, has already traveled 200,000 . miles since his lection at Colorado Springs last June. He has made 300 speeches, met with more than 30 governors and most all of the top U. S. officials. He has held several conferences with President Dwight D. Eisenhower on world problems and areas of mutual cooperation between the U. S. Junior Chamber of Commerce and the U. S. gov- ernment According to Boyd , Name withheld, but story is on actual cats taken from Telephone Company files. for only $249230 I Bunnell, Jay-cee- a, the May 12 meeting shall also serve to Introduce newly elected state officers and local officers into their obligations and responsibilities for the coming year. The Jaycees, at the recent state convention in Richfield, elected Robert C. Poe, Salt Lake City, president of the state organisation. Ted Anderson, Salt Lake City, and Glen Burnham, Layton, were elected national directors. Newly elected ice presidents are Wayne W. Ott-leMurray; Ralph Hillman, Pay-oChester Cripps, Cedar City; Kent Palfreyman, Springville; Irving Chipman, American Fork; Len Allen, Ogden, and Dean Eyre, y, n; Logan, The May 12 meeting shall also spur the groups ambitious "SUTA project SUTA Selling seeks to keep Utah to America the Utah Jaycees top in Junior Chamber of Commerce activities and to keep Utah high in the nation as a tourist and industrial center by advertising the state at the national Jaycee convention in A gigan Atlanta, Ga., June tic rally and dance will be held at Lagoon resort, Friday, May 27, to help finance the national SUTA r MJL VlUlS . Price, president of the Utah . k MhmW Jeeelfyf Intel SPECIAL Stdo Modal 48. Wiatrotad. Optional aqui panant, occauorWt, Mata opd local hna, M any, additional. Pricao stay vary tfigMiy la odiotnlnq co uniHa. axtroa yoo wry want ora borpotn. tvaa lha loctory-imteila- d todio A Aatanne-tU-Ot me I) oi Hoatar 4 Datroatar-ISIJT- Oj Moor, can throw out your chest and YOU certainly this strapping big Buick yours. Because as any comparison shows the dollar difference between this brawny beauty and the smaller cars is now virtually erased. So if youve been holding back, thinking Buick waa out of reach yourself go. You can afford Buick if you can afford any new car and the .price we show here proves it. well-know- n Buick Sales Art Soaring To New Best-Sell- Highs Thats a major reason for the phenomenal success of Buick today. So much so, that production and sales are hitting new peaks to move Buick more firmly into the tight circle of Americas best sellers. And a companion reason for this soaring popularity is Buicka full line of cars to give you a choice SPECIAL, in any price class the bedrock-price- d CENTURY, the extra-roomthe high-power- SUPER, Its the extra lift and snap and ginger you get V8 power and from Buick such of fun thrill and the eager might. bossing afford if said can As we any new car, yon yon can afford a Buick even with the spectacular performance of Variable Pitch Dynaflowf at modest extra cost So why settle for anything less than a Buick? Drop in on us, take the wheel, press that pedal, and see for yourself what a whale of an automobile and a whale of a buy todays Buick really is. f Dyeagoo Drive it KaaJarJ on RovJmaittr, optional a ex sat on other Seriet y. ed and the custom-bui- lt -- hot the ftuick SPECIAL Is Priced! onJ other cor ofl88 hompewer RoADMASTER. But pure and simple, its all the automobile you get for your money thats winning to many new Inch whaelboae? Mow the ftukk SPECIAL le P el the three models tome -t- owners to Buick. Its the extra pride you feel, the extra room you enjoy, the extra comfort you get, the extra safety you sense from Buick styling, Buick size, Buick Buick solidity of structure. hat tmallar -t- 123- - well-know- coot e more ftuick SPECIAL qhet you hat the of automobile than ony other pound et It low price? car g, 20-2- 3. wort mrj lay to naki joor Tilepbooi piopli la Otak wains. tdophoio stnrlca 11 oioa bljior 11-1- n()Xn j, YfariMlI project The next state convention of the Utah Jaycees shall be held In CAN VOU SEI STEM STOP SAPELY7 af CHECK TOUI CK jfogw as ESanS&Hr ACCIDENT WHEN SETTtt AUTOMOBILES AM IUIIT SUICX . WILL BUILD THU4 Logan. Since his election to, national president of the U. S. Junior Chamber of Commerce, Mr. Buck' per and his family have resided in Tulsa, Okla headquarters for the national organization. uu. 533 S. 5TH couimruL. UTm V. - |