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Show u X7 PIUTE COUNTY NEWS. JUNCTION. UTAH Men of Proved Nervo TWO HOMES Scared by Microphone HAPPY MADE By Women Who Used Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound. "I have taken Lydia E. Plnkharas Compound and I think it Vegetable is the most won- - derful medicine I ever tried," is the statement made Mrs. by Goldie Shoup ot IlliSt. Joseph, nois. She de- clares that after taking the Com- she Is in health than before. Mrs. J. Storms pound better of 29 Lane Street, Faterson, N. .T. writes: I cannot speak too highly of your medicine and I recommend it to all my friends. These statements were taken from two enthusiastic letters which tell of the help that lias been received from using the Vegetable Compound Both Mrs. Shoup and Mrs. Storms n were in a condition which caused them much unhappiness. When women are suffering from lack of strength and from weakness their own life and that of their family is affected. When they feel well and strong and are able to do their housework easily, happy homes are run-dow- the result. Are you on the Sunlit Road to Better Ileal th? 1927. Western Newspaper Union.) are not the only things powIf we er by being brooded want to enlarge and multiply or that unpleasant everything which has offended us, brooding over It will do It. that are given added life and over. During the summer months we enjoy other foods than meat': occaslon- - ally a day of steaks or chops will be enjoyed, but the bulk of the meals are better for us with Levity Resented little meat man who had bought a very valuable building site was surveying bis newly acquired property In a mood of reverie when a stranger, in a similar mood, accosted him. Sir, said the man, I remember when this property was a farm. Why, I buried a dog here in those days. And now I read that It has been sold for half a million. Yes," said the new owner, with a smile, I bought It." The stranger was obviously hurt. But what Im telling you, he said, Is the truth." A Firecracker Good Bait one-thir- one-hal- No. 33-19- 27. Its always the man who doesnt want credit who can get it for the asking. lf Two cases of owls have been shipped Torn San Diego, Calif., to Lord Howe Island In the South seas, where It Is hoped the birds will wage relentless war on the array of rats offending the 11 inhabitants of the Island. correct internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine Gold Medal. well-beate- one-four- th After a period of storm and stress we should look carefully for the rainbow; It Is there. I f . I d lf Owls to War on Rats HAARLEM OIL BAYER ASPIRIN SAY Onions on ToasL Cook a bunch of young green onions In enough water to cover until tender. Drain off the water, add a tablespoonful of butter with salt and pepper. Prepare buttered toast and pour over the hot buttered onions, moistening with a bit of the liquor In which they were cooked. Serve hot. Nuts With Cheese. Beat to a cream one tablespoonful of butter, then add one-hal- f cupful of cottage cheese which has been well seasoned with salt and cream. Cream cheese may be used If at hand. Add one-hacupful of chopped hickory nut meats and serve, adding a bit of lemon Juice and make Into balls. Serve as a salad with lettuce, or with crackers as a dessert, with coffee. Pineapple Sorbet Prepare a sirup of two cupfuls of water and the same of sugar ; boll 15 minutes, add one can of pineapple, one and cupfuls of orange Juice and one-hacupful of lemon Juice; strain and add one quart of charged water, freeze to a mush and serve In frappe glasses. Walnut Graham Bread. Take one f cupcupful of flour, two and fuls of graham, one-hacupful of molasses, two cupfuls of sour milk, two n eggs, one teaspoonful of salt, two teaspoonfuls of soda and one cupful of walnut meats. Mix and bake in a moderate oven. Nut Cutlets. Take one cupful of bread crumbs, cupful of finely chopped almonds, a little onion or chives, season well with salt and pepper. Put over the heat one cupful of milk; when boiling add the bread of crumbs and four tablespoonfuls butter. Cook until thick. When oool add the nuts, a little parsley; shape Into cutlets, roll in eee and crumbs and fry in deep fat. Serve with tomato sauce. Seasonable Good Things. During the summer weather we enjoy light foods and those which are the least tax upon the Salad is a digestion. dish which is found on most menus. and Egg Vegetable Salad. Take five hard cooked eggs, one small green pepper, one-hal- f cupful of finely chopped celery, four tablespoonfuls of tomato catsup, one tablespoonful of lemon juice, two tablespoonfuls of oil, one-hateaspoonful of salt, teaspoonful of paprika, two cupfuls of shredded cabbage. Cut eggs into halves crosswise, remove the yolks and mash them. Cut peppers, remove veins and seeds and mince the pepper fine. Combine the celery with the pepper and egg yolks seasoning and add enough mayonnaise dressing to moisten. Fill the whites of the eggs with this mixture. Mix cabbage with French dressing, using three tablespoonfuls of oil to one of vinegar, with seasonings. Serve the eggs on a bed of cabbage. e Custards. Butter four ramekins. Divide two cupfuls of bread cubes among the cups. Ileat two cupf fuls of milk and add pound of good rich cheese cut Into bits, or better grated; add a teaspoonful of salt, paprika to taste and two beaten eggs. Pour over the bread in the ramekins and set them Into a pan of hot water to bake In a moderate oven until the custard Is set Serve hot. Nice for luncheon dish with a lettuce salad. Baked Fish With Shrimp Sauce. Frepare a stuffed fish for baking and bake as usual. Serve with the following: Melt three tablespoonfuls of butter in a saucepan, add one table-- ) spoonful of flour; when well blended h of a cupful of tomato add f cupfuls of boilsoup, one and ing water, one teaspoonful of paprika, a dash of cayenne and salt to season, with three tablespoonfuls of lemon juice and one pound of cooked shrimps; simmer for five minutes. Nice with broiled or boiled fish. Onion Salad. Chop or cut into fine cubes a large Bermuda onion, add enough cubed apple to make up the desired amount to serve, cut up a half down dates and serve with a good salad dressing, after seasoning well. Pineapple Souffle. Melt cupful of butter, add the same of flour and blend well. Add one cupful of milk gradually and bring to the boiling point, then add one cupful of drained pineapple, the crushed or grated kind. Beat the yolks of three cupful of sugar, eggs, add cook until thick. Cool slightly and fold In the stiffly beaten egg whites, add a dash of nutmeg and a few drops of vanilla. Bake In a slow oven until well puffed. Serve warm with whipped cream or a hard sauce. lf lc CAPSULE gTl and INSIST I Unless you see the Bayer Cross on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 25 years. lf DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART Accept only Bayer package which contains proven directions. Handy Bayer boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100 Druggists. Aspirin la the trade mark of Barer Manufacture of Monoacettcaeldcater of SallcjUlcacld one-four- th Egg-Chees- one-hal- . i Pa Buzz has allot breakfast - r. - i clears home of flies and FLIT spray It also your kills bed bugs, roaches, ants, and their eggs. Fatal to insects but harmless to mankind. Will not stain. Get Flit today. r ! I DESTROYS Flies Mosquitoes Moths Ants Bed Bugs Roaches i r iiiiimi m. ( "Thitllowca m&tt hack j.) j one-fourt- one-hal- one-fourt- h Childhoods Lessons affect the whole life one-fourt- h ; , i i Teach your children to use Cuticura Soap dally to keep the skin clear. Soothe and heal rashes, eczemas and other Irritations with Cuticura Ointment. Shampoo with Cuticura Soap to keep the scalp in a healthy, hair growing condition. 25e. Ointment 25 end tOe. Triram 25e. Sold eyerrwlw-r- . OaUcara Labaratexla Oapt. Sample each free. Addreae: Kaas. Malden. S3, 8op Bf Cuticura Shnrins Stack 25c. The Recluse of Fifth Avenue SEASONABLE FOODS tlve-minu- &1J Salt Lake City, (.Eggs Ten-year-o- haarlem oil has been a worldwide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. W. N. U., . Richard Wesson of Boston, spending the summer at lake. Is one fisherman who remains calm while others dispute nlmut flies and worms. Richard preAs one cracker fers firecrackers. snapped over the water a bl pickerel leaped for It and fell back stunned The Wessen from the explosion. campers had a good fish fry, as the pickerel measured more than a foot in length. Boston Globe. FOR OVER 200 TEARS 13 Ohe KITCHEN CABINET Prince William of Sweden la a renowned animal hunter, who stafads 4 feet 6 Inches in his stocking feet, but, from an incident which has Just become known, he was completely cowed by the microphone. It was apparently a premonition on his part that he was to have an unusual experience. At any rate, as he walked into the deadened studio and the broadcasting was Just about to begin, he mopped his brow and exclaimed In an agonized tone: This is terrible I" As related by M. H. Aylesworth, Berlenbach, who fought young Strlb-lin- g in the roped arena, suffered an even worse experience. Berlenbach was to give a talk on Bravery in the Prize King," but became so terrihed that lie strode out of the studio, never to return. STORY FROM THE START From the comfortable financial situation to which he had been born, Peter Mllman, American gentleman of the old echool, and last of hie family, Is practically reduced to penury through the misfortune of a friend. Haze i Brewer, whom he had unwisely trusted. Learning of Brewers suicide, which means the destruction of his last hope, Mllman engages a French butler, Achllle Lutry, who speaks no English, and Is to replace Sneed, servant of long standing. By Lutry, Mllman sends letters to Prof. Fleming d Bradney, Floyd Malet and Barnes, men whom the world has classed as failures, once of high position. Nee-lan- CHAPTER II Continued "Beside yourself there will be, I trust, Neeland Barnes, formerly an International polo player and owner of race horses, and Floyd Malet, who, when he seemed about to take his place in the world as a great sculptor, suffered an unfortunate eclipse. Bradney went to the library and opened the New York directory. Sure enough, Peter Mllman was recorded as living on Lower Fifth avenue. The thing, then, was not a foolish practical Joke. Puffing at a big pipe, Fleming Bradney sat on his little balcony and gazed at Manhattan lights. This strange letter had awakened old hopes and ambitions that he had thought for ever dead. Of course, there could be no practical Joke which expended a hundred dollars on its fulfillment Bradney read the letter again. The phrase, Perhaps at this dinner you may be offered the opportunity, took his Did fancy strangely. Opportunity any exist for a man who had been disgraced and was now forgotten? Until this letter came Bradney had believed his career finished. He went Into his bedroom and disinterred a suit of full evening dress from Its mothball tomb. He had not worn It for a dozen years. 1 Peter Milmans letter reached Neeland Barnes at a moment when that eminent sportsman was engaged In staving off his most persistent creditor, the landlord Llppsky. Barnes was a tall, finely made man who had run through several fortunes by his love for horses and his inability to Judge of their chances in races. After his wife bad died, his relatives had shrugged their shoulders and abandoned him. The many schemes for his rehabilitation had failed. He disappeared from fashionable resorts. His only daughter was being brought up In England by rich relations. Ho had drifted about the world until, at the end of all resources, he had taken a little bouse on the outskirts of Peekskill. Here he was engaged In what he explained as an attempt to stage a comeback. He was trying to become physically fit, and he was succeeding. But mountain hikes and sculling ud the noble stream brought no grist to the mill. Mr. Barnes, you are a loafer, Llppsky cried when the sportsman had announced his inability to pay rent long overdue. This seemed cruelly unjust to a man who had Just returned from a twenty-mil- e walk. Some day. If you keep on annoying said Neeland Barnes, I shall me, kill you. You dont have to kill me," Llppsky You Just pay my rent. cried shrilly. Sell your swell clothes and get overHe waved Peter Milmans letalls. ter. Get some of your swell friends to lend you money. Neeland Barnes looked at the letter, puzzled. He did not recognize the writing, but the statloneiy was reassuring. When what you term ray swell friends know I am living in a hovel like this, they will advance me the money. I shall rvpt ask them until I have finished my training. I am about to begin. If I hit you, its your lookout. Barnes began his shadow-boxinexercises. Dimly Llppsky perceived that his debtor was getting nearer and He went out muttering nearer. Loafer." It was a word which did much to appease him. Barnes boxed no more when hla He read landlord had disappeared. the astonishing letter a dozen times and secreted the money-orde- r at once. Alone of the three who had received somewhat similar communications, he knew of Mllman and his family. Very distantly they were connected by marriage. Barnes had no Idea that the n Brewer failure had brought Peter to penury. One sentence he found strangely Intriguing: If, as I believe, you feel yourself unfairly treated by the world that was yours, I may be able to offer you the opportunity to take your place again In society." Neeland Barnes longed above all things for the comfortable life that bad once been bis. He had never permitted tumself to become shabby. Never had be sunk to sucb a state that former friends would besitate to . g Mil-ma- recognize him. He clung to the Idea that when once he ceased to shave and wear clean linen the descent to hell would have begum He rolled a cigarette and Indulged Good dinners In pleasing reveries. were not given Idly nor were hundred-dolla- r bills expended for nothing. Peter Mllman wanted him to do something. Well, Neeland Barnes was his man. Perhaps after all these years the man who had run away with Mrs. Mllman was back In America. Perhaps Peter Mllman desired him to be chastised publicly. He would find Neeland Barnes devoid of fear and In better physical trim than he had been for a dozen years. Barnes always saw himself In a heroic light. He hoped the thing would be staged so that his old cronies might see it They would never believe that he could keep so fit after the scandalous rumors that had been spread about him. Naturally them would be expense money. It would be a delightful experience to pay Llppsky his deferred rent In nickels and cents and watch him scrambling feverishly for the coins among poison Ivy. And he would be able to send his daughter a decent present at last Poor Nita, whom he had not seen for years, brought up by Jealous relatives far from his care. The adventure might lead to amazing things. Presently these brilliant prospects faded. He was conscious that his only home was In Ltppskys grotesquely furnished bouse. Adventures with glorious endings offered themselves only to youth. He sighed a little. Then he smiled. After all, he had the hundred dollars and the prospect of a good dinner. the name of a poor living by teaching drawing In Philadelphia private schools. The man who had hoped to see his name associated with Rodin and Meunier was forgotten by all save the few who had seen In hint the signs of genius. Malet was a man of middle size, thin and haggard. Once or twice fastidious pupils had complained that he paid too little attention to his personal appearance. Milmans letter came by late mall. At first the sculptor was Inclined to think It an advertising scheme of some sort. The I.ower Fifth avenue address was thick with loft and office buildings. Like Bradney, he went to a library and looked up Mllman. The genealogical department gave him ample data. The strangers letter held out the promise of temporary relief from an intolerable life. There was money for the trip and enough over to live for many weeks as he had lately learned to live. He packed his grip, thankful he had saved a suit of evening clothes. There is something vivifying about the air of Manhattan. It had Its effect on the three men bound for Peter Milmans house. Bradney held up his head again and Malet lost his droop of depression. Neeland Barnes, walking briskly down the avenue, passed clubs which had dropped him on account of nonpayment pf dues and felt himself within measurable distance of His military mustache and fine carriage made him a marked figure, and he liked the limelight. As he neared the Mllman house he wondered what his fellow guests would be like. In other years no physicists had been numbered among his He was not quite ceracquaintances. tain what a physicist was. As to sculptors, he had met one In Rome, but he was a marquis. Sculptors were probably all right. He was reassured by remembering that the wife of a former polo pal had her own studio. But he would probably have to domn inate the conversation with Peter and talk of old New York society. He must be careful not to mention the Daynes. The runaway wife had been a Dayne. Wedged In betwetn tall buildings, the Milrnan house looked squat and Yet Barnes gazed at unimpressive. It with respect. To be able to retain It spelled wealth. Lesser men would have sold at a profit and moved upWhat this millionaire might town. want with Neeland Barnes was a de- Floyd Malet, under M. Floyd, was earning Mil-ma- U WYNDHAM MARTYN Copyright In tho United State WNC Barrie lightful mystery. He rapped loudly with the brass knocker. A few minutes earlier Floyd Male! had stood appalled at the smug ugliness of the building. He did not think with any sympathy of that generation, represented by the builder, which had distrusted elegance and loved what was solid and lasting. To the sculptor it seemed the Mllman home was modeled on the old Astor house. But he liked the door and the brass knocker, which was a copy of that decorating an Oxford college. The last to come was Fleming Bradney, whom the subway had delayed. He rather liked the house. It had strength and the air of studied Isolation. None could look through Its windows to disturb the Inmates. It lay fifteen feet back from the sidewalk. Bradney had that Imagination without which mathematicians can never be great. Whom and what was he to see behind the tall door? CHAPTER U1 disapproved of with lavish gestures. This was not the sort of butler a Mllman should employ. He followed him to a library, where he found his host speaking to Floyd Malet. It was as Barnea thought Sculptors were not quite up to his soThis stranger was cial standard. and' his physically Inconspicuous, Neeland Barnes Achllle, who admitted him clothes should have been more recently pressed. Neeland Barnes held out his hand to Peter Mllman, as one could to a man of his distinguished ancestry, I, with a smile which said plainly, at least belong here. It Is very kind of you to come," said Peter Mllman. He turned to Floyd Malet: Mr. Malet this is Mr. Neeland Barnes." Barnes nodded a little coldly. Curious, he thought, that Peter Mllman should have introduced Malet to him. Then Fleming Bradney came In. Although his clothes were of another era, there was an air of power about him. His was a carelessness due less to Ignorance than to lack of concern with other peoples modes of life and thought. In an age when beards were unpopular he wore one, and little children hissed Beaver" to him at every street corner. Peter Milman, so Barnes thought, treated him with extreme respect. It was not until Achllle brought In the cocktails that Barnes frown left him. It was easy to see that of the three Peter Milman considered him the least Why, he wondered, did Important, Milman esteem It an honor to have a physicist to dinner? The word recurred many times. This must be some new way of describing a physician. That was It. Physicians were not so bad. One had married a Vanderbilt In America and another a duke of Norfolks daughter In England. The second cocktail found Neeland Barnes more amiable. He looked keenly at his host, but discovered no trace of nervousness about him, no wildness of eye which might confirm the world's opinion that he was mentally unfit. Perfectly dressed, as than usual, but no better turned-ou- t Neeland Barnes. The dining room was beautifully furnished. "Ha, ha, said Barnes, good old Chippendale the sculptor corrected Sheraton, gently. Just as you like, Barnes said genially. There were certain bottles In plain view which banished any he might have felt Not for n years had he sat down to a really and dinner. Everything about him spoke of lavish exTo Floyd Malet everypenditures. thing spoke of exquisite taste. The relief, after years of furnished dissonance, was grateful. He felt cheerful after a decade of gloom. The bearded Bradney noticed only that he was sitting at a bountiful table and invited to sip excellent vintage wines. What was the reason? He was Impatient to know. What opportunity was he to be offered to regain the rank In science that disgrace had bereft him? 1 or well-chose- well-cooke- d (TO BE CONTINUED.) One Eye Her Oculist Son Could Not Help The oculist had a Joke the other morning. Every now and then he smiled quietly to himself. You know, he said finally to the Woman, mothers are wonderful people. They always believe there is nobody quite so clever as their own children. Now, my mother, for Instance, thinks I know everything about eyes. She doesn't confine her boasting to the neighbors, either. She Is Just as likely as not to walk up to a nearsighted or crosseyed passenger In the subway and tell him his eyes need attention and that her eon is the best oculist In New York. She says that Isnt hunting business for me ; Its helping people who dont know enough to look after their sight But the Joke la on - her.- Yesterday she met a man ho Is., distinctly and painfully wall-eyeYou mustnt let your eyes go like that, she told him Immediately the Introductions were made. My son can do anything with eyes. Why dont you go to see him? Im afraid he can t do anything with this eye, madam answered the object of her solicitude ; you see, Its a glass one.' " New York Sun. Aztec Religious Belief The Aztecs believed in special who brought diseases and In gods other who knew healing secrets. gods The bark of several species of the eucalyptus tree yields a rosin, hence the tree Is called the "gum tree. i V . |