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Show THE SAUNA SUN, SAUNA. UTAH Saturday Night in Japan Maurine Crane u Taylor, music manager at North Sevier high school, report? that twelve new band suits have arrived. Now the entiie group, consisting of sixty members, will appear in uniforms on April 22, the date set for the Sevier music festiva to be held at Monroe. This is the laigest marching band that North Sevier has had during its history, and the music manager reports that it is also the best. Part of the funds for these suits were earned by the members of the music department at its annual dance on December 25, the rest was contributed to the band by the staff of the North Star" from funds earned dur. ing the carnival. In order that the band members might get their suits, the Star staff gave up the publication of the graduation Star. r jV ' ii tty ffjcsgwft - 21 "OME on in, the waters fine. Bath-- J ing in Japan is on a different plane from ours, as these two American gentlemen can tell you. Tubs are perpendicular there, instead of horizontal, and you stand in the water up to your neck. But we shouldnt laugh at this somewhat primitive scene, according to Consumers Information, which points out that only a hundred years ago, there were only 1,500 bathtubs in the Unitfed States, all of them in Philadelphia, where they had a city water system and taxed each tub $3.00. President Fillmore installed in the White House in 1550, Advertising of the advantages of convenient and sanitary bathing started 31 years later, has continued increasingly ever since, and has made the United States the cleanest nation on earth. Even the most advanced European nations are far behind us in this respect, and the possession of a bathtub in most countries is a sign not only of opulence, but ostenta' tion. The United States is among the few countries generally educated to the knowledge that health and cleanliness go together. the first tub The annual opera of North Sevier high school, Lelawala, will be presented by the music department on Mai eh 21st, at the senior auditorium. Under the direction of Clayton Sorenson, instructor of music, whose students have always presented outstanding operas, the opera of 1938 promises to be an unusual musical treat to the people of North Sevier. Approximately 90 per cent of th? student body will take part in this opera, with eighteen of the best singers and actors in leading roles. Fartial plans for the Fathers Helds Open, House Lc:ve fer Eastern On Anniversary Day Buying Trip Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Nielson of th Tuesday afternoon was open house at the home of Mrs. C. E. West, and Merrill Nielson clothing store, left Wednesday for the east, where they will visit wholesale houses and select merchandise for their Salina stoi;e They will spend two weeks, and will go to Denver, Colo., St. Louis, Mo., and Chicago, 111., traveling by train. Enroute west, they will leave from Racine, Wis., where arrangements have been made to take delivery on a new automobile. many friends? relatives and neighbois called to extend felicitations to the hostess in honor of the anniversary of her natal day. .The hours were spent in sociability, and Mrs. West presided at the tea table when a dainty luncheon was served. A family dinner was given Friday at the West home. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Albert Corya and Mr. and Mrs. George Brown of Provo. and Sons banquet were drawn at a meeting held last Tuesday, March 1. Al- though the date for the banquet has not been set definitely, it is probable that it will be in the Second ward banquet hall on March 18. Rodney Rasmussen was appoints general chairman. The members of the F. F. T. will finance the banquet and Miss Francis Christensen, homemaking instructor, and homemaking students, will prepare and serve it. Since this is an annual affair, the students are locking forward to making it the largest end most successful banquet ever held by the Future Farmer club. Missionary Returns. Due to poor health, Don Christensen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Christensen, who recently received an honorable release after serving sixteen months as an L. D. S. missing field, reary in the Swiss-Germa- n turned to his home Sunday. Church officials, fearing Dons health was being impaired by the damp climate in the European c.ountry, advised his I cmjtnuiWviu ct Shower Held. Friends of Mrs. Marvin Ctlby, a lecent bride, entertained at a shower An in her honor Thursday evening. interesting program, which consisted of the following part?, was given: Trio, Mieses Gweneth Jensen, Camille Blackburn and Ruleen Jensen; clarinet duet, Miss Lola Jean Christensen and Miss Dorothy Talboe; duet, Miss Rulla Jenson and Miss Nathelia Chri tensen; solo. Miss Francis Shay; solo, Miss Colleen Christen eon. Readings were given by Mrs. Jabez Jensen, Mrs. Ruby Stevens and Miss Koa .Poulsen. A delicious lunch was served to some sixty guests. Out guests were Mrs. Claud BurMrs. Bert Jensen, Mrs. Hicks gess, Okerlund, Mrs. Roland Crane, Mrs. Max Sorenson, Mrs. Sherman Anderson, Mrs. June Monroe, Mrs. Roxannn Crane, Mrs. Marvin Gregg, Mrs. Roy Keiscl, Mrs. Elmer Colby, Mrs. Carl Anderson, Mrs. Kent Jeffrey, Miss Marjorie Crane and Miss Carol Anderson of Salina, and Mrs. Reed Hansen of Provo. Mrs. Colby was pre- of and sented with many beaut'ful and , gifts. us-f- ul Mrs. Harold Anderson and children week-en- d at Richfield. The Young Married club and partners were guests Saturday evening of Mr. and Mrs. Swen Jensen. Finochle was played, after which lunch was served .to sixteen guests. Mr. and Mrs. Terrance Hansen were high score prize winners, Mr. and Mrs. Moroni Jensen took second high, and Mr. and Mrs. Blain Poulsen received the consolation prize. Mr. and Mrs. Reed Hansen of Provo were special guests. Mr. and Mrs. Albeit Poulsen, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Anderson, Mrs. Wm. Allred and Mrs. Austin Mason were at Salt Lake City Wednesday to attend the funeral services of their aunt, Mrs. Enoch Cornia. Mrs. Delbert Hansen entertained the members of the Self Culture club at her home Thursday afternoon of last week. The lesson, the subject of which was Wake Up and Live, was given by Mrs. Vernal Nelson. Mr. and Mrs. Reed Hansen and daughter, returned to their home in Provo Sunday after a visit of ten days as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Amos Talboe. Mr. and Mrs. Oral Jensen had as Mr. their guests over the week-enMills of and Mrs. Vernon Castlegate and Schyler Brown of Spanish Fork. Mr. and Mrs. Lamar Rasmussen and son, returned home from Salt Lake City Tuesday. While in the capital spent last underplace large - v Just-the-rig- nary o ' pan. fur-nls- b 4T W W V 9' WWW vvw'" V W W V V ; a s - ' ' V - J M Coal - '' Town of i.r v'1-'- Castle 6fip - - j. fuel Coal Tipijle, Hiawatha, Utah U. S. of-to- d, Household V WV early release. Standard Up. Monroe and Salina exchanged asBetween 1790 and 1930 the Ameri- sembly programs on Friday, March .Monroes program consisted of Back of the average wage earner can standard of living was raised 400 cent. readings, songs and instrumental today is a $7,600 investment, its ma- per solos in the form of a party at a jor part composed of the factories, home e 1,000-miland materials. after a dance. The program at tools, equipment Japan is now threatening a China. Monroe, drive into the interior of presented by Salina,, was in Denzil Merrill, student of the should that remember charge The best thing about some radio The Japs This program conthe and as is body home president. long just irograms is that you can always trip solos vocal of sisted by Lillian Wiltoo arent roads good. switch. the urn off any liams and Lawrence Mecham. Instrumental solos were given by Neal Ivie and Dwane Burgess. A girls double trio sang, The Way You Look Toplay, Not Such a night. A one-aGoose, directed by Lola Durfee, and with Nell Sorenson, Glenda Andrews, Ivan Taylor, Milo Knight and Marvel Sorenson, was enthusiastically accepted by the students. This program Hints was presented to the junior high Helpful school on March 8. It will be given at Recipes Gunnison on March 11, and Richfield Conducted by ELEANOR HOWE sometime during the latter part of month. this on If the little tabs your daughFor a brand new flavor In grape-frui- t Clark underwent an operation for th halve tbe ters paper doll dresses do not 1 . i ! I' removal of his right eye. Eaily last fruit, spread with hold the dresses In received their When students place, simply punch a butter, i 'J M grades for the work they had done fall a stick pierced the eyeball of the broiler hole through the doll during the fourth term on Wednes little tot. It was thought as first that flame, and brown and dress (somewhere of center the in the the eye could be saved, although he Sprinkle lightly. day, March 2, there were fewer with sugar or doll) just could not see out of it, but complicahad there and than failures salt, as you pre- enough for the head terms. been Despite tions set in and in order to save his of a snap fastener to during previous fer. Serve hot. Give illness from colds among students, left eye the injured one had to be re pass through. If you have a beautiful silver set the child a card of several in the various homerooms moved. which you like to keep on display large fasteners and Mrs. Oral Jensen entertained Friscored a hundred per cent in atten(and who wouldnt?) but find it let her do it herself. Nelsons and dance day afternoon in honor of the fifth punctuality. Jay difficult because the silver tarnishes FUDGE REFRIGERATOR These wax after it homeroom polishing, had the anniversary of her son, My birthday Just easily. highest percentage COOKIES are delicious and they and It will never tarnish. in attendance and punctuality, and ron. The time was spent in playing dont have to b6 baked. The recipe Mrs. Allreds in scholarship. games, after which a delicious lunch CHERRY SHERBET is a de- makes 4 dozen squares: Combine was served to ten little guests. choco2 squares of unsweetened licious, fluffy, smooth February desMrs. Eris Erasten was hostess to sert. Its made so by the beating late, which hare been shaved, with for What Constitutes Protection and mixing of the dasher in tbe ice cup evaporated milk and heat the of annual the Young Married club last Wednes the America, subject cream freezer as it Is being frozen, over low flame .until chocolate is afternoon. Pinochle was played, contest national 2 day and by Add sponsored essay cups Bugar To make It, add 1 cup granulated melted. the national American Legion auxil- with Mrs. Blain Poulsen winning first sugar to 1 pint water and boll to- teaspoon salt, stirring until dissecond gether 6 minutes. Soak 1 table- solved. Cook until this mixture iary, is challenging the thinking and prize. Mrs. Gerald Hales took spoon of gelatin in 2 tablespoons reaches the soft ball stage (228). received Hansen Mrs. Terrance and writing abilities of the students- of cold water and dissolve in tbe hot Remove from flame and add 1 Mrs. Joe Mickelson the English department at present. consolation. syrup. CooL Add 1 cup cherry tablespoon butter. Cool slightly a was Salina special guest. A deli Juice, drained from tbe canned and then add 24 marshmallows, 1 these themes, consisting Wednesday, cup lemon Juice. Color teaspoon vanilla extract, S, cups fruit, and lunch was served to eight cious hundred to fifteen twelve of from the mixture the desired shade of graham cracker crumbs and 1 cup words, were handed to the English guests. red with vegetable coloring and chopped walnut meats. Mix well Mrs. Lewis Sorenson and son, spent teachers. The best three will be sent then pour in freezing container of and press In well greased shallow modern ice cream freezer. Beat week at Ephraim as guests of pans. Chill In refrigerator 8 or 12 , last to a state committee. egg whites until stiff and pour over hours, or overnight, and then cut Sorensons parents, Mr. and mixture in the freezer. Assemble in squares. These cookies will re--- h Torgensen. cont; and sweet of main and cover. Then pack mixture if stored who is stationed at Ft oean crushed ice and rock salt (use 3 sistency for several days Galina of the Heath, imerits junior J, pai parts Ice to 1 part salt by volume) in the clean, properly humidified a music and Douglas, Salt Lake City, is a guest school picsontod high taround the freezing container. Turn atmosphere of a modern in the high school gymn- of his mother, Mrs. Joseph Heath. dance revi- ice refrigerator. crank slowly, but steadily. When asium-op mixture becomes too stiff to turn, vVednesday evening, March When trying on a dress, which in about 5 to 10 minutes, remove 2. Teaching Duck to Swim Approximately one hundred per cover carefully, take out dasher, needs alteration, turn the dress The one WPA, we see, has allotted $83 students of cent the participated; and pack down evenly with a spoon wrong side out and use safety pins M7 to finance a study of the worth one and ten and hundred remove danced, the wax girls then and with pins Cover sherbet to size it; paper much easier. hundred and fifty students partici- of tourist trade in Florida. Well, that replace cover. Draw off water Snd and baste. Its will be nice walk for the relief client replenish Ice and salt mixture. pated in the singing. The dancing CHERRY ANGEL FOOD CAKE: Cover and allow to harden at least who can get it. And what a field, for with The Skaters Waltz, Here is a February variation for one hour before serving. before as I Dennison putfood Just cake: ura soloist; Spring; new WPA projects it opens up! The angel A handy bed table for an Invalid ting an ordi- Dance, with Isabell Martin doing the worth of climate to California, of au . who has to remain in bed may be angel solo dance; a Spanish dance; a min- - 'hors and politicians to Indiana, of oi made by cutting off the legs of an food cake mixOklahoma and Texas, of steel tc d nee a Dutch dare? old card table ture 1 n t o a and and smooth- Waitresses' ids erd dance, '.ittsbuigh, of skyscrapers to New gently in-- 1 ing off the fold In V, cup Other York, of automobiles to Detroit, of numbers the Big Apple. ends with m a r a s chlno to Boston, of government bu beans selections and eluded songs, readings sand paper. cherries, which and to reaus and drum Washington. Why, the possi bugle the corps It will by have been plenty chopped fine the junior high school band, directed bilities are practically unlimited drained of room for and by Clayton Sorenson. Yeinell Chi is any number very dry. Then bake Just as any tensen acted as accompanist for the was directed by Ardith Fpalding, an of things the convalescent may other angel food cake . Howe' Eleanor 1938, him. by Copyright, wish to have before singing and dancing. The dancing the vocal music by O. M. Myiup. Job Investments. w V UTAHS ENDLESS ASSET Thelma Jensen, Correspondent - o W. - j Editor Ivan f f REDMOND NORTH SEVIER SENIOR HIGH NEWS j ing and shipping the coal. Many companies have built and maintain Vice Preildent end Gen'l Manager towns (o house their employes. United States Fuel Company Depression, drouth; natural gas, is fortunate in having fuel oil, hydroelectric competition UTAH of the largest bituininous and Increased efficiency in coal fields in the world. En- burning had cut Utah's coal progineers estimate 350 million tons duction in half by 1934. Then an available within forty years and upturn waa indicated. Output for billion tons of present 1936 was about 3,150,000 tons, forty-sivalue for mining after forty years. worth at the minei about $6,500, Total production has been about 000. Of this, it is estimated, $4,000,000 was paid out in wages 127,735.000 tons. About comes from seams at least 16 feet and salaries; $1,000,000 for equipthick. Only lr0 of the nationa de- ment, supplies and power; $450,000 posits worked are as thick. Utah's for taxes and royalties; $225,000 coals are notably free from impuri- for compensation and other insurties, containing, as a rule, less than ance, and the remainder for misVo ash and .5 7o to ,7'c sulphur. cellaneous expenses. The Industry a profit vegeta- at a whole has not shown Palms and in recent yeari. tion bordering a shallow inland sea or paid dividends cents of the coal dollar, millions of years ago were buried Sixty-twis goes for payrolls; it computed, under sediments and compressed business coninto coal. The outcrops were first 15H cents to Utah and power; 7 en cerns for supplies mentioned by topographic cents for taxes and royalties and Utah 54 tbe 1853. in 'In glneers rest for insurance, maintenLegislature offered $1000 (pr the the ance, replacements and interest. 18 discovery of coal not less then Miners, under a union agreement, Inches thick within 40 miles of Salt Lake City. The search was work 35 hours a week underground to fruitless. However, two Welsh at wages ranging frombulk$5.78 of the 7 hours. The for $7.50 at bank coal a miners opened Indus used Wales, in Sanpete County, and coal sold is slack, and for domestic shipped cake by ox team to Salt trial purposes Markets are found in stokers. Lake in 1858. Idaho. Montana, Nevada, California, Commercial coal mining began Utah, Washington, and, to with completion of the Union Pact Oregon, a lesser extent, - in Nebraska, lie railroad in 1869. In 1878 the Kansas and Alaska. About kalf into was built Western Rio Grande Is Bold outside the the tonnage the Carbon County field. Large state and brings money Into Utah scale smelting operations swelled to on payrolls, supplies, apply consumption in 1900 to a million freight and other locnl expenses. tons. From 1914 to 1920 the States Coitl mining and transportation output doubled, reaching 6,005,199 is essentially a large volume, low-cotons in the latter year. operation and it may be asThe coal horizon, extending from sumed that when Tactile Coast the Wasatch mountains into Colo consumption approaches that of rado, is from 200 to 700 feet thick the Atlantic seaboard Utahs ton in alternating beds of sandstone nages and freight rates will apand shale. Workable beds vary proximate those on the East coast. from 4 to 28 feet in thickness. They Before fuel oil prices dropped, coal differ greatly in dimensions and be was taken by most western railcome unminable in places. In cer roads and many ships on the West tain instances tho coal has burned coast. Mines and smelters, publlo out for miles along the outcrop. utilities, cement and neet sugar Twenty Utah companies ship by industries and packing plants are rail. Smaller properties at Coal now large users. Known supplies ville and elsewhere in eastern Utah of petroleum, as measured in th bring the total to 40. Twelve mines life of a nation, are extremely averaging more than 100,000 tons limited. New wells are needed t maintain a supply ahead. a year, produce about three-fourth- s Coal resources are sufficient for of the State's output. Modern machinery plays an Inr centuries. - Low temperature carbonization of the portant part In 1935, 88 coal mined was .cut by machines of coal probably will supply the loaded mechanically country with some petroleum suband 30 Electric haulsge is common and stitutes. Hydrogenation of coal t dehoists and long surface tramways gasoline has been successfully BeWorkers are veloped on a commercial scale. are often required. safeguarded by the use of water cause Utah coal is particularly sprays and sprinkling of coal dust suitable for such processes, its are In this connection rock dusting, electric lighting, with permissible explosives and protec most interesting. The future, Steel tipples and ils development for processing live clothing. preparation plants, costing some coal, may make that ofmineral by the many times a quarter million dollars or Tar the most important J rich resources of Utah. more, function in cleaning, By OTTO HERRES x one-thir- d semi-tropic- o st es Great Britain, according to cable One man who is not likely to be is reduced to the relief rolls Anthony dispatches, it cheered by the increase and Eden, British foreign secretary. His in the number of new babies father-in-lawilled him an annuity building permits. Maybe they planned of $25,000, and Mrs. Eden w'as left it that way. , k $750,000 in one sum. Sir Anthony has discovered ihat the British cabinet is no Garden of Eden. Subscribe dont borrow. KEEPING YOU N TOUCH WITH WORLD EVENTS Our WEEKLY NEWS REVIEW gives you a condensed, editorial interpretation of the events of each week that are READ IT carefully from week to week You will find it inte- resting and helpful In your discussion of world events with your neighbors and friends making world history. It is a syndicated newspaper feature prepared by Edward W. Pickard, one of the highly trained newspaper observers of the nation. newspaper can offer its readers any better foundation for their intelligent No discussion of the events of the world. We consider ourselves forhistory-makin- g tunate in being one of the newspapers able to secure this valuable feature.' |