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Show PAGE FOUR SUGAR HOUSE. UTAH THURSDAY FEBRUARY U, 1960 INDEPENDENT (Say Valentine Carnival-Ba- ll Friday t"V" V"':-- V V'C"JV ; ' " "' - ; '1 Staff Photo Members planning the Ball for Beta Sigma are shown in the above picture; back row, left to right, are: Mrs. Wallace Taylor, social chairman; Mrs. Bob Kazarian, president; Mrs. Herbert Maxey, general chairman; Mrs. Sam Kichus, publicity chairman; on the front row, are: Mrs. Merl Landmark, vice president and Mrs. Walt Verzani, entertainment chairman. Alpha Omicron Chapter of Beta Sigma is ' sponsoring a Valentine Ball Friday evening Feb. 12, from 9:00 to 1:00 at the Meadowbropk Country Club. The ball is to be a carnival and will be semi formal. Mickey Paramaur and her all girl orchestra-wil- l play for the dancing. The ball is to be a Ways and Means project. It is also Alpha Omicrons Spring pledge party. Prospective pledges and their husbands will be guests of the chapter. Mrs. Herbert Maxey is general chairman of the ball with Mrs. Philip Salazar, Mrs. Walt Verzani, Miss Stella Garcia and Mrs. Wallace Taylor assist-ing her. Mrs. Merl Landmark is chairman of the mem-mersh- ip committee, with Mrs. Sam Kichus, Mrs. Leon Jarrett .and Mrs. Edward Koplin, assistingher. Parents often learn from their v kids, and maybe you'll jolt yours. DEAR SALLY: All the girls in our crowd have been invited by some boys we like to attend a big dinner dance with them. My folks recently gave me for my birthday a gorgeous new evening gown and I'd like very much to wear it to this dance. The only thing is that I . happen to know that the boys will all be wearing business suits. Would it still be all right for me to wear my new gown? ALMA. DEAR ALMA: Not if you were the only girl in the party wearing a gown. Why don't you get together with the other girls and suggest that they 'dress up," too, for this party? Usually this doesn't take much persuading and quite often at such affairs the feminine members of a party will wear gowns, even though their escorts attend in business suits. For the faithful followers of "Dear Sally": last week's issue of the Independent included the question but not the answer to the next letter. Here are both question and its answer for our readers who have this problem. DEAR SALLY: Maybe you'll think I'm a poor sport, a bad loser, or just a plain cheapskate but here goes anyway. At the end of our bowling night every week, the other four fellows on my team and I have been flipping coins to see who pays for the beer - and four times out of five I come out the loser. This has been going on all this seasoa and I'm beginning to feel that I'm a sucker - but don't know what to do about it. Advice? GUS. DEAR GUS: You can skip the beer with your teammates -- - and go home. DEAR STEW: You're being taken for the well-know- n ride by a very unstable sort of girl. And that late-da- te routine in most circles is better known as "two-timing- ." For my money, yours is no engagement and you'd be better off if you cancel out right now. DEAR SALLY: I'm a girl of 15, and very much attracted to a darling boy of 16. The trouble is, whenever he asks me for a date to go to the movies or to the snack bar where all our crowd does, I always have to pay my own way. He tells me he doesn't have much allowance money from his parents and that he has only enough money for himself on these dates. But I happen to know that he always has enough money to go bowling or to sports events with his buddies. I can't bring myself to dropping this cute fellow, but what else can I do about this? KAY. i DEAR KAY: An occasional Dutch treat date between boy and girl is all right, but when a boy does this all the time, he's just riding the gravy train. Certainly, if he's going to date the same girl quite often, he should prepare him-self to foot most of the bills. The next time he asks you for a date, tell him that you can't afford the cost this time. It might awaken this fellow to the fact that you don't like paying everytime for the pleasure of his company. DEAR SALLY: I'm a boy 10 years old, and my parents are always doing something that bothers me. They like to talk or gossip about friends and neighbors. First they'll say to me, "Don't you listen to this," and then they go on with their talking about other people, and how can I help listening? Isn't this kind of dumb? BIG EARS. DEAR BIG EARS: I'll bet the fact that your parents caution you against listening proves they know it's wrong to gossip. And Til go along with you, it is "kind of dumb" to expect you to close up your ears while they talk. The next time they suggest this, try coming back with "Why don't you wait until I'm not around? Dear Sally By Sally Shaw DEAR SALLY: The girl I became engaged to two months ago has been behaving oddly here of late. She's dating other fellows on the nights I don't call on her. She claims this is her way of having - a last fling before , settling down to married life, that in this way she will get all other men "out of her system." The payoff came last Saturday night when I brought her home at 1:30 a.m. and there was another guy waiting to take her out. She told me this is called "late dating," and that it's done all the time. But I'm just about fed up. Do you blame me? IN A STEW Obedience" is the mother of success, and is wedded to safety. STEREO RECORD HEADQUARTERS FEHR'S PHOTO 2925 E. 33rd So. HU 4-05- 23 CEME-0I- L COLD WAVE dbH IM STYLE q sio f) SAVE AS YOU SPEND... AND YOU PAY NO MORE PLAZA BEAUTY SCHOOL 2121 So. 10th East IN 60015 i : 1 FOR THE ULTIMATE in BEAUTYSEMEWSh ( C- - V on the EAST BENCH call this ft PROFESSIONAL STAFF y 9 BEAUTICIANS TO SERVE YOU call for appointment CATHERINES BEAUTY SALON 2112 E. 13th South IN 7-1- 260 South last Highlights The Independent would like to welcome some newcomers to our area. They are Dr. Ogden and his wife Heen and their three daughters: Karen 20. Gwen 17, DonnaK, and their son DavicT, who are making their home at-263- 9 Skyline Drive. Dr. A. McKay Ogden has moved to Salt Lake City to practice dentistry; he and his wife were former residents of this city, but for the past seventeen years they have been living in the state of Washington. He has opened his office for the practice of general dentistry on 3013 East 33rd South. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Caldwell and daughter Judy, 1710 Sigurd Drive, left Tuesday night for Glendora, California to attend the funeral of Mrs. Caldwell's sister, Mrs. Winifred Baker, who died suddenly Monday night, February 8th, of a heart attack. Surviving his mother is David Baker, 15. Mrs. Caldwell's mother, Mrs. John Brunjes, also died unexpectedly of a heart attack last month. The Independent extends it's sympathy to the Caldwell's. February meeting of the Utah Press Women will be held at the new home of Margaret Masters, 214 Canyon Road, on Saturday, February 13, atl:00p.m. Members are asked to bring entries for the National Contest to the meeting or present them to Chairman Wanda Lund or Merle Shupe. The February meeting of the. Salt Lake City Ministerial Asso-ciation was held Tuesday, Feb-ruary 9th, 12 noon at the Re-deemer Lutheran Church, 1955 East Stratford Avenue, City. For the program the honorable-J- . Bracken Lee, Mayor of Salt Lake City, was guest speaker. Due to the interest aroused by the meeting a large group attended. Funeral service for Mrs. Charles, Denise H.. Denney, was held on Tuesday February 9th, at 1:30 p.m. at Evans and Early Funeral Home. Interment was in Sunset Lawn Cemetery. Mrs. Denney has been a familiar figure in Sugar House for thirty years. She will be missed by her hosts of friends who knew her as the owner and operator of "Bunny's Lunch" at 2268 Highland Drive. |