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Show T : I A '1 PIUTE COUNTY NEWS, JUNCTION, UTAH k KITCHEN S I enume - i CABINET U2. 1927. Weitiem Newepacer Union.) love In thia land to- - The hero w j day la tha kero who lightens omi fellow mana load Who makes of the mountaina some pleasant highway. Who makea of tha desert some ' blossoming road. (Ml U1 HERE ARE SOME CAKES The following simple cake Is easy to make and if baked in a loaf will keep moist until eaten: One-EgPlum Cake. 255 Separate the white and yolk of an egg. Cream four tublespoonfuls of butter with one cupful of sugar, add three-fourth- s of a cupful of milk and one and one-hal- f cupfuls of flour sifted with one teaspoonful of cream of teatartar and one-hal- f spoonful of soda, stir lu the yolk aud add one-hacupful of raisins dusted with . flour, then fold In the stitlly beaten white of egg aud bake In a moderate oven. Nut Cake. Cream one cupful of f butter, add one and cupfuls of sugar, add alternately with two cupfuls of flour sifted with one teaspoon-fu- l of cream of tartar aud half a teas of spoonful of soda, and a cupful of milk. When well mixed and throughly beaten add the whites of four eggs beaten stiff. Flavor to taste, add a cupful of nut meats and bake In a sheet. French Loaf Cake. Rub to a cream f one and cupfuls of sweet fat, add two and one-hal- f cupfuls of sueggs, two and gar, three one-hal- f cupfuls of flour sifted with two teaspoonfuls of cream, of tartar and one teaspoonful of soda. Add three-fourth- s of a cupful of milk alwith the flour and beat well. ternately Divide into halves and to one part add raisins, citron, nuts and spices to the other; bake in a plain loaf. Cover with white or chocolate icing and bake both cakes together. This gives two cakes with one mixing and baking. l Chocolate Cake. Cream one of butter, add one cupful of sugar, one cupful of sweet milk, two eggs and one cupful of flour sifted with two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, flavor with a teaspoonful of vanilla. To half a cake of grated choco f late add cupful of milk, boll up, remove from the heat and add one cupful of sugar and the yolk of an egg; stir into the enke. Bake in layers and use a boiled frosting for filling. Simple Chocolate Layer Cake. Cream cupful of butter, add one cupful of brown sugar, cupful of aour milk, one teaspoonful of soda, one tenspoonful of vanilla, one egg and one and cupfuls of flour. Dissolve two squares of f chocolate in cupful of hot water and stir Into the cake the last thing. Bake In layers and put together with orange filling, using the usual cream filling with the grated rind and Juice of an orange added. A Few Soups. Soups should be seen, not heard. Cream of Pea Soup, Put through a colander one pint of cooked green peas, add a quart of milk, a bay leaf and a teaspoonful of onion Juice. Melt two tnblespoonfuls of butter, add two tablespoonfuls of flour, and when well cooked add to the first mixture. Remove the bay leaf and season. Potato Soup. Cook three potatoes until soft. Scald a pint of milk with two slices of onion. Beat the potatoes with a wire whisk and add ; to the Cook together one tablespoonmilk. ful each of butter and-flondding pepper, salt and celery salt to taste,' add to the milk and potatoes and gar-- ' nish with two teaspoonfuls of parsley just before serving. Rice Soup. Cook a slice of' onion in one cupful of hot milk, add one-hacupful of the rice water saved from cooking rice, add- a tablespoonful of butter and flour cooked together, season to taste, add the milk and rice water and serve garnished with minced parsley. Cream of Tomato Soup. Melt three tablespoonfuls of butter In a saucepan, add three and one-haof flour, cook until well blended, then add two cupfuls of h strained tomato, teaspoon-fu- l of soda, one teaspoonful of salt and one tablespoonful of chopped onion. Cook' five minutes and then f add one and cupfuls of hot Vl BAYER ASPIRIN SAY and INSIST 1 g Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Headache Colds Neuritis Lumbago Pain Toothache Rheumatism Neuralgia DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART Accept only Bayer package which contains proven directions. ITamiv Bayer boxes of 12 tablets lf Also bottles of 4 and 100 Druggists. Aiqiirln is the trails mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetlcactdeater of 8allcyUcacl4 one-hal- three-fourth- one-hal- Spain's Monks and Nuns Moving Mountain Range Monks and nuns in Spain at the beginning of Uiis year numbered 17,210 and 54,600, respectively, an increase In the last 24 yqars of 24.077. There are 4,500. mouastnrles and convents. The province with ttie highest per rentage of members of religious orders is Guipuzeon, with 132 for evefy lO.(HH) inhabitants, while Orense has the lowest, G per 10.0(H). The Andes the longest mountain system on earth, covering a line of are moving! So 4.5(H) miles In length claims Dr. Bailey Willis, a noted American scientist. Moreover, Doctor Willis traces the cause of earthquakes in Japan and Chile to the heaving of this muss of gold and silver and copper, of lead and Iron and tin, mid of earth and stones. It was the moving of the mountains that caused tha San Francisco earthquake In 1900, udils Doctor Willis. Cull-fornl- well-beate- n table-spoonfu- By ELMO SCOTT WATSON Drawing by Ray Walters. iHO said that Romance Is kept and were In the possession of uio dead In these modern Russian quartermaster of the pirate until he died in the Far East. days, in this year A. D. ship Eight expeditions were made to find 1927? the treasure between 1800 and 1892, Pieces of eight! Doub- but most of them never reached the loons! Treasures of the desolate coast of the island. Those did found that the landmarks, Pirate that Main ! , Spanish marked on the map, had been wiped . I TREAS-' gold out by a landslide. BURIED Robert Louis Stevenson used the URE!.A the scene of 'Treasure Do those words bring back memo-lie- s place as Simmons Island, says, but the plunto you memories of your boyhood der found In fiction really Is still there. days when you first read Stevensons Such Items are not pt all uncommon Treasure Island"? - That was long in our newspapers and probably will ago, perhaps, and yet--e Here are three dispatches which continue to appear therein for many have appeared in our newspapers years to come. For, among our most within the last few weeks. Read them cherished traditions is the belief that and see if they dont give you a sort every pirate who sailed the main at o thrill : some time In his career buried a part NEW YORK. Residents of 'Asbury of his loot somewhere and never rePark and nearby villages are warming covered 'It. And there (wherever up to a hunt for pirate, treasure as thc to this day awuit-in- g result of the discovery1 by Percival G. there" is) it lies whom the lucky discoverer, Ullman, Jr., of No. 96 Lake street, Asbury Park, In that city of a fossilthrough blind chance or because he has ized boot of the type worn by swash- -, come across some old document which bucklers two centuries ago. Embedded In the boot Ullman puts him on the trail, it will enrich found a womans gold ringjvset with a beyond his wildest dreams. As a matlarge pearl. ter of fact it is much more likely that The boot was found near the spot where a' flintlock carbine was picked the average pirate squandered more of hL gains than he ever up a month ago. A band of sea marauders, led by a women, took refuge buried, that not one in ten of all the at the spot. The women cut her half short and was ,a ruthless plunderer, stories of buried treasure have the the original bobbed-hai- r bandit. slightest foundation in fact and that more mohev has been spent in the NEW ORLEANS. Mysterious bands efforts to find tills hidden wealtli than of treasure hunters still range across which all the pirates the Louisiana marshes. They are seek- all the treasure ing the buried spoils of the pirate Jean in history ever buried is worth. Lafitte. But these facts, even If they could The buccaneer is said to have cached be definitely established, probably vast stores nl' doubloons and pieces of eight along the great coastal stretch would fail to dim the lure of the supsouthwest of New Orleans. posed buried treasure nor dampen the Reported discovery of a burled treasof those who go out to enthusiasm ure near Vermillion bay a year ago lure and that enthusiit. That seek caused considerable excitement. One party of treasure .seekers went asm are based upon a universal human so far as to pull up a post set by govdesire. weakness the getrich-quicernment surveyors, evidently believing Poe Is as much that the stake was one of the mark- Perhaps Edgar Allen responsible as any one for nourishing ings made by Lafltte. It Is said that two members 'of the buried treasure angle of that deband once lfved in the vicinity sire. So long as the tradition of hid.. of the city of den treasure on our coasts persists and OHIO. CLEVELAND, Doubloons, so long as his Gold Bug is read by pieces of eight, and' other treasures of successive generations of Americans, the Spanish Main, to the value of so long will we have the great Amerb lie burled on a South American hunting-piratgold. island, ready for the person who Is can sport of Only a year or so ago a Canadian willing to dig, according to George curator of orniFinlay Simmons, anDbknced his invention of the metalo-plionthology of the Cleveland Museum of an electrical Gold Bug, which Natural History, who has Just. returned from the island. The ckche includes could detect the presence of buried much golden plunder taken from metals even though they were conIn Inca Indians by the Sphniardso-whbeneath more than 50 feet of cealed turn were robbed by the two pirates Immediately the word who buried the loot 'a century ago on solid rock. the island off the coast of Brazil. went out that the metalophone was to Simmons says, One of the hoards, to find the buried treasure on amounts to 140,000,000, and was buried be used Cocos island, which lies historic Jose the Santos, by the Spanish pirate, who captured a ship laden with gold in the Pacific ocean about 500 miles and silver Ingots, aktar vestments and southwest of Costa fiiea and which candelabra from the churches of was a favorite lair of pirates in the Lima, Peru. More than $8, 000,000 more was old freebooting days. In fact Cocos burled on the same Island by, an Eng- island has been a magnet for treasure lish pirate, who styled himself Records of this cache were seekers for many years becanse there t s that a flush in the hand I worth two on the face, and for that reason, the United States of America is starfdlng I rememner once, while serving as pat." said a correspondent In Washington, Harsh Puritanism Sam Langdon of St. Louis, ' "how I la 1659 the Puritans, through the chanced to be present, at a diplomatic conference in whicMpfrlgue and guile general court of Massachusetts, are were so manifest as to be almost an said to have enacted an ordinance that everybody .who is affront. Finally Mr. Roosevelt, hav- providing ing stood It as long as he could. found observing by abstinence from Jumped to his Ret arid 'exclaimed: labor, feasting or otherwise, any such Gentlemen, you cant get away with day as Christmas day, shall for every it I Let me say in plain United States, such offense be fined 3 shillings. -- rock-encrust- k Ln-fltt- es Lak,-Charles- . e, 5 Zul-mlr- o. T. RS macy one-hal- is an apparently story that the mutinuous crew of the British ship Mary Dear hid on the island treasure valued at $12,000,000 (some accounts put it at $35,000,000 and others at $60,000,000) more than a hundred years ago. Soon afterwards the secret leaked out and scarcely a year has passed since that time that someone has not tried to uncover this vast wealth. As inte as 1025 a party of British scientists set out for that purpose, but if they or anyone else have been successful, the world Is yet to hear of It. The treasure which the famous Captain Kidd Is supposed to have buried somewhere along the New England coast is nearly as famous and as much sought after as the Cocos Island wealtli. It is true that he did bury a part of I1I3 loot on Gardiners Island, off Montauk point on Long Island, N. Y., when he returned from his trip but that was recovered soon after his arrest. And that Is all of Captain Kidds gold that lias ever been recovered. The famous Blackbeard is said to have buried part of his piratical wealth in New Jersey. Wherefore gold diggers" have made the dirt fly at various places in New Jersey but more particularly at Burlington. Legend says that Sir Henry Morgan hid part of his loot beneath the soil of Oak island, off the coast of Maine, and more than $200,000 has been spent from time to time digging on Oak island to recover It. So far the net result has been nothing. The gold of Jean Lafitte has kept treasure seekers busy at various places along the coast of Louisiana and Texas. This legend is almost s perfect buried-treasuryarn. There is a document, bequeathed by a father about to die, to his son, bearing the date of 1813, which tells of the burial by Lafitte anJ his men of 70,000 doub loons and a bar of silver. It is signed the pirates followers by a number-o- f and has as its seal the usual pirate marks, the skull and crossbones and a dagger. There occur also the words mutiny," cruelty and "inquisition" and on the other siJe is a rude map which Is the key to the location of the hoard. There is a story of a party of men who stumbled upon the place where they were sure that the treasure was buried, then went back to get spades to dig and could not find the So there (wherever place again. there is) lies Laflttes burled treasure worth $1,120,000 for someone. But. in the argot of the day, try and get it. . e First Golf Club The first golf club used on the first golf course west of the Mississippi 1 to be ep shrined In a place of honor at the Wichita Country club. Prof. C P. Clark was the first one to introduce golf to the residents of this city in Kansas. Which Is Worse ? We ask you, man to man, which la worse, profanity, or declaring that something Is perfectly darling? Little Rock Democrat. l one-fourt- h one-quart- one-fourt- h one-hal- , ur, lf lf table-spoonfu- one-fourt- one-hal- milk. Celery Soup. Take three cupfuls of celery cut into bits and cooked in water to cover until soft enough to put through a coarse sieve. Scald two and one-hal- f cupfuls of milk with a slice of onion, remove the onion and add the celery. Bind with three tablespoonfuls each of butter aijd flour cooked together. Season with salt and pepper. Serve with croutons or crisp crackers. Pea Soup. Take one can of marrow-fat peas, add two teaspoonfuls of sugar, a slice of onion, a pint of milk and a cupful of water, using the liquor from the peas. Add seasoning of salt and pepper and bind with two lablespoonfuls each of butter and flour cooked together. Remove the onion when adding the flour and butter. If Kidneys Act Bad Take Salts your Horse! has a Cough, Cold or 8ays Backache Often Aeane You Have Not Been Drinking Enough Water Distemper, write today for a Free Sample Bottle spohns When you wake up with backache and dull misery In the kidney region DISTEMPER COMPOUND It may mean that you have been eat- 80c and 61.80 at Drug Store Write for free booklet ing foods which create acids, says a Spolin Medical Co, Dept. Z, Goshen, India authority. An excess of such acids overworks the kidneys in their effort to Hirer it from the blood I and they become sort of paralyzed ami Relieve that itching, burning lore tnent and start the healing with When your kidneys get slugloggy. gish and clog you must relieve them, like you relieve your bowels, removing all the bodys urinous waste, else you have backache, sick headache, dizzy spells; your stomach sours, tongue Is coated and when the weather Is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine Is cloudy, full of sediment, INFLAMED LIDS It incrratNMi the Irritation, channels often get sore, water scalds lie MiTCHKLL tVB and you are obliged to seek relief two 6ALVK, a simple, sale rented. or three times during the night. 25o at all drucgUti. Hell A ftoekel, Sew fork flfr Either consult a good, reliable physician dt once or get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad W. N. U, Salt Lake City, No. Salts; take a tablespoonful In a glass of water before breakfast for a few Followed Directions days and your kidneys may then act The young daughter wanted to prao fine. Tills famous salts is made from tiee at the mother took the acid of grapes and lemon juice, a drive. baking while her return the mother Upon combined with litliia, and tins been found every bowl In the house had used for years to help clean and stimbeen used, and all were standing In ulate sluggish kidneys, also to neua row on ttie kitchen tuble, ready for tralize acids in the system, so they no washing. Upon inquiry, the embryo longer irritate, thus often relieving cook : Well, ttie recipe said explained bladder weakness. to beat eight eggs separately." inIs Jad Saits inexpensive, cannot Christian Science Monthly. jure and makes a delightful, effervescent lilhia-wate- r drink. Drink lots of Soil Photography soft water. Color photography is now being sucLong Names Common cessfully used In the field Investigation Long and intricate names of Ha- of soil types. Photographs have been, waiian children nre not uncommon, A taken by the bureau of soils of the United States Department of Agriculbaby girl has been named Juliet ture, and the various colors, mottllngs Nakail, the first name meaning the and streaks show distinctly on the flower wreath and leaves are cher- plates, permitting Identification and ished by tlie waters of the god Lono." study. well-know- n Resinol DONT o It Is more shameful to mistrust your friends than to be deceived by them. La Rochefoucauld. Unless above himself he can erect himself, how poor a thing Is man ! ' S. Daniel. Science Is true Judgment In conjunction with reason. Iluto. The noblest mind the best ment has. Spenser. content Mother Claims All Can Have Good Health " f . Colorado Springs Woman , Mother of 13 Children, aftel Suffering For 20 Years, Regains Health and Strength Quickly. Takes Tanlac n Mrs. Sulle V. Noble, a Colorado Springs woman, living at 805 Bonfoy Ave., says: My experience proves that nearly every one can have good health. After 20 years of despair, pain and worry, I regained health, strength and energy. . . .Thanks to Tanlac. I had suffered from what I believed was asthma. I would wake up at night coughing and struggling for breath and my daughter would have to sit up with me for hours. The strong medicines I took upset my stomach, spoiled my appetite and put me where I could scarcely eat and retain food. A friend suggested that I try Tanlac. I did. And the results amazed me. I began to sleep better, relish my food without suffering from indigestion pains. I gained weight. Tanlac was a lire saver to me. I now enjoy good health, sleep like a child, go all day without tiring. But I have not stopped taking Tanlac for It is the one remedy tor continued good health and well-know- I' AJi X &&& ' - strength. Everyone should take it. Tanlac has helped many Colorado men and women. It Is natures own remedy made from roots, barks and herbs. The first bottle usually brings relief. Dont neglect your health, dont suffer from pain needlessly, begin taking this wonder tonic now. Ask your druggist for Taalaa today! "A |