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Show PIUTE COUNTY NEWS, JUNCTION, UTAH The KITCHEN i CABINET L fairy Tale bonner J Uc), 1Z7, extern Newapupur W Luiun ) As the truest society approaches always nearer solitude, so the most excellent speech finally falls Into silence. Silence Is audible to all men at all times, and In all places. She Is when we hear Inwardly, sound we hear out wardly.--llenr- y Thorea u graham oriioi ii vtmiN gg. Pacific Salad. Take one cupful of cooked spaghetti cut Into hits, one good sized stalk of celery, two green peppers all cut line, add two sweet cucumber pickles cut into thin slices and plenty of good boiled salud dressing. Savory Loaf of Beef. Take two pounds of beef from the top of the round, one cupful of bread crumbs, s of a cupful of milk, two tahlespoonfuls of butter, one egg, one and one-hal- f tnblcspoonfuls of Halt, a lash of nutmeg and cayenne and the juice of one lemon. Add the dry Ingredients, then the melted butter, lemon-Juiceegg well beaten and milk Poll Into a loaf and dust well with salt, pepper and bread crumbs; hake forty-livminutes, haste with butter and water or with beef extracts and water. Serve with a brown mushroom sauce. Rice and Coconut Custard. Put of a cupful of rice Into a double boiler with three pints of milk, cook until very soft, then set aside to cool. Heat three eggs leav ing out the white of one add one cupful of sugar, ami one cupful of fresh grated coconut. Stir Into the cold mixture and bake In a moderI over with n meringue ate oven. made from the beaten white and two of powdered tahlespoonfuls sugar, llrown and serve with cream. A Day With Candles. A simple recipe for chocolate caramels Is the following: Chocolate Cara, one- mels. Tuke three-fourth- , e f well-washe- half cupful of gruted chocolate, one cupful of sugar, one cupful of molasses, o n eh a I f cupful of milk and a tablespoonful of butter. Cook to soft ball stage and pour out Into a buttered pan to cool. Cut Into squares when cool enough. Here Is another: Chocolate Caramels No. 2. Take two cupluls of brown sugar, one cupful of molasses, one-hal-f cupful of uiilk, pound of grated chocolate and a tahlespoonful of butter. lU.il twenty minutes, stirring constantly. Pour into buttered pans and mark olT when cool. Chocolate Creams. 1U.1I two cup f fuls of sugar, cupful of vva ter and a pinch of cream of tartar until the sugar sirup makes a soft ball when dropped into cold water. Cool and stir until creamy, let stand well covered vvitb buttered paper foi two or three, dajs to ripen Then mold In balls, dip Into baker's cliocw lute melted over hot water and place to cool on buttered sheets. Orange Drops. (Irate rind from out orange, squeeze the Juice, removing Add to the juice and rind all seeds enough powdered sugar to make Into small balls. Ice Cream Candy. Take two cup s fuls of sugar, of a cupful of f cold water, cupful of vinegar, boil without stirring until It makes a hard ball in water. Pour out to cool on a buttered platter and when eo.il pull, adding a few drops of flavoring Taffy. Take two cupfuls of 'brown cupful of butter, four sugar, one-hatahlespoonfuls of molasses, two of vva ter, two of vinegar. Boil fifteen min utes. Hickory Nut Macaroons. Take one pound of powdered sugar and chopped nuts, the unbeaten whites of five eggs one tablespoonful of flour and two tea lix all spoonfuls of baking powder together and drop by teaspoonfuls on a baking sheet and hake a light brown Orange Angel Cake. Cream two cupful cupfuls of sugar and one-hal- f of butter, add four egg yolks, three squares of melted chocolate and .one cupful of mashed potatoes. Sift two f and cupfuls of pastry flour, teaspoonful of nutmeg, five teaspoonfuls of baking powder, one-hal- f of salt and teaspoonful teaspoonful each of cinnamon and cloves: add alternately with two thirds cupful of milk, beat for two minutes, add one cupful of walnut! slightly chopped. Then fold In the egg whites beaten stiff. Bake In layers for twenty minutes. one-fourt- h oue-hal- two-third- one-lml- lf one-hal- one-fourt- h one-fourt- iimm STIFF AS A POKER You FOOD When fresh mackerel eunnot be obtained there Is nothing heller than the suited variety. It Is pucked In small wooden pails, with heads untl tails removed so there Is almost no waste. When soaked over night and then baked for twenty minutes, covered with cream, they uie delicious eating. . Mackerel Potato Balls. Cut enough pared potatoes Into quarters to till a pint cup. Turn Into a saucepan and cover with boiling water and cook uniil tender. Mash and mix with linked leftover mackerel. conked Shape Into halls, add seasoning and fry in fat after dipping the hulls In vmtm Factors Fixing Growers Warned to Cull Damaged Corn THREE Price of Hogs Present and Prospective Supplies Are Among Dominant Influences. (Prepared by (ha United State of Agriculture.) Department losses may be sustained by corn growers this year unless damaged corn Is culled from market shipments, the Department of Agriculture says In a warning to producers. The com crop, especially In many sections of Minnesota, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana and Ohio, contains a large proportion of damaged ears, according to reports of producers, grain dealers and grain Inspection record.-- i Market discounts will be assured un less shipments are free from damaged corn, the department says. Damaged ears In the corn when shelled result In low grades being assigned the corn when it reaches ter minal markets end is graded by licensed grain inspectors, it was pointed out. Low grade corn lakes a discount In price in approximate proportion to the quantity of sent to niurke!. To prevent maiket discounts where shelled torn contains damaged ker nels, corn producers and country corn dealers are urged by the department to pick out the damaged ears either at the time corn Is husked In the field, when It is put Into cribs, or when It Is shelled. To obtain best results, the damaged ears should be removed at euch of these three operations. Iiy removing the damaged ears before the corn is shelled, says the department, the remainder of the corn cun be stored with less danger of becoming damaged, and such corn gen eraily will grade higher by one or more grades, and sell more readily at a higher price by several-centper bushel. The damuged ears, while practically worthless on the market, will make fairly good feed on the farm. may think, Raid the poker, Is only useful In making a fire go, but a poker can put a a fire out, too. Well. said the Im not shovel, given to thinking and hi tn u c h, many ways that Is an advantage. I t, can Now think one Way as well as another. So Ill he obliging the think and way you choose to have me think. "Im ready to agree that u poker can put out a fire, too. th United 8tatea Department rPrtparad of Agriculture ) Financial returns to hog producers depend to a considerable extent upon how well they adjust the volume of by their production to the demand for the product, declares the Department of Agriculture as a resu of a study of the factors that nffect hug prices. The dominant Influences In the hog mnrket, says the department, are the supply of hog on the market and expected to arrive on the market within the next few months, the quantity of hog products In storage, the general price level, general business conditions, and the prices of alternative products. The general levels of demand, here und abroad, are both Important, but ordinarily change only slowly. Hog-Pric- Cycle. e The so called cycle was found My the department to be due to the tendency of hog producers to overshoot (be mark In Increasing production when the relation of hog prices to cent i rices was favorable, and to reduce too much when It was unfavorable This excessive reaction, eays the department, resulted from the illation of production changes during the Interval before reduced or Increased breeding began to offset mar-ke- l receipts and prices. ratio. IndicatCoupling the corn-boing vvlint changes were likely to occur In breeding, with other factors Indicating changes In the weight of hogs and the demands of the consumers, he department believes that very good forecasts of hog prices could have been made for the prewar period. Since the war, however, conditions have been so unstable that the purely mathematical formula hns not given such satisfactory results. Information From Surveys. The department believes that Its pig surveys have provided the hog market with much better information as to prospective supplies (him were available before the World war, while the agricultural outlook reports of the department and similar Information from other sources may be tending to :hange farmers reactions. Full details of the study have been Bulletin published In Department 1440-D- , entitled Factors Affecting the Price of Hogs, copies of which mav he obtained fflbm the Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. bog-pric- e Youre most obliging," said the poker, but at times It is not helpful to conversation to be too obliging. "You almost sound ns though the conversation could end right now for all you care." "Maybe so, said the shovel, "but on the other band, I have no objection to hnvlng It continued. Well, Hint Is not exactly enthusiastic," said the poker, hut It will do. YeN. ns I said before, you may think a poker Is onlyjiseful In making a Are But then again you have seen go. how they poked out the few remaining coals and then used you to cover up the conls with ashes. "But It Is not of our kind of a fire of which I am going to speak." "All right, said the shovel. The tinker was too stiff to smilo at the shovel for being so indifferent. The poker could not help being stiff any more than the shovel could help being the way It was. It Is a forest lire of which I wish to sponk. And It Is not of a real poker that I shall tell you, hut of a r sort of poker. Still I claim any kind of a poker as belonging to the family." Do you?" said the shovel. All right." "Yes," continued the poker, "it was a forest fire or at least the beginning of one. 1 beard little Edna telling about It as she sat by the fire tonight. "I.lttle Edna and little Eugene and Diseases of Lambs Are little Harry and little Melly were out In the woods on a long country walk, Discussed in Bulletin and as they were about to leave and With the Increase In the lanth feed to come home they saw that the woods lng Industry In Colorado diseases have were beginning to burn In several made their appearance, and In some pi goes. years losses have been excessive. As "It had been dry for some time and the winter feeding season Is In full there were a number of places where force a bulletin published by the Colo smnll fires were getting under way. rndo experiment station on Diseases They were in a burry to get borne, of Colorado Feeding Lambs becomes but their love of the woods was so particularly timely. This bulletin Is prepared for the great that they stopped anil pounded with rocks and sticks the places where feeder, to whom It will furnish valuthe fire had started. able Information. It will also serve Oh, how they felt about people who veterinarians who practice In were careless with fire In the woods, districts and to whom the who did not completely put out fires, feeder will naturally turn for advice - who said: and counsel. Well, thats probably all right, Among the diseases which cause a loss In lambs on winter feed It deals "Or, " 0h, that will go out now of Its briefly with the following: Hemorown accord. rhagic septicemia, paratyphoid dysen "Even though they were In a hurry tery, coccldial dysentery, overeating, to get home and hail not had any din- sore mouth, Indigestion, bloating, diarner and were tired, they stayed and rhea. pneumonia, scab, ticks and others. put out the tire. They found out where it was creep ing under the rocks. They discovered Vital Plant Foods Lost where it wns about to spread. When Straw Is Burned They did all they could to help their beloved woods. They did not Some small grain farmers still burn their straw stacks apparently una only enjoy the ware that straw Is valuable. cool, restfulness of the woods, the Clean straw should be used for bed soft walks, the ding whenever possible It may tints wood foliage and add to the comfort of farm animals flowers they aand later replenish the soil by Its re turn to the land as manure. It Is realppreciated the woods and they ized that more straw is produced on did not want to many farms than can he used for thi sec their beloved purpose. Where a large surplus of w o o d s tn a d e straw Is on hand It Is sometimes de brown and forlorn slrable to scatter It over the land, and sml. disking it in. and plowing It under ns Before they fertilizer. Sometimes soil moisture is left they found a a limiting factor and means that the w e t, tn mid y straw would remain In the soil for a stream and they A good practice tong time unrotted would he to leave the straw stack to put tlie big sticks in tie mud and rot and inter haul the residue to the then poked t hem land as manure It takes a year or in where the tires more for the straw to rot. depending had started. on the rainfall. The stack should he So it was cool and safe when they located where it will not seriously left. with cultural operations. "And I love to think that the sticks which were ttM'd ns pokers were not stiff and hard, but were helpful and kindly ami cool and friendly toward the woods winch the children love amrm and which supply our old hearth with t in all tie farm machinery and Bring many a friendly log." ?tore It. I really did enjoy hearing that, said the shovel. Good foundations under buildings are one of the most important things Just Dropped Himself about buildings. Little Bohliy was playing on the second floor porch, and stepping backKeep plenty of fresh water before ward fell down the stairs. Ilis moth the fattening hogs Slop will not an er hearing the noise, came to the door swer the purpose. and called down to see what the The man who departs from the beatbumping was. Bobby picked himself Nothing hap en track of a good balanced ration up and called back, I ju-- t petted. dropped myself.' pays for it sooner or later ac-ru- made-to-orde- Intnb-feedln- g mMum Not on Display Visitor Jimmie, do you get good marks at school? Jimmie Yes, but I cant show em movable brooder house with a stove In it Is an economical means of raising a large number of chicks n one Mmo A coal ER. I Injured Ears Result in Low Grades Being Set Heavy "that a poker EVERYDAY one-lml- Daddys Eveiii i : J : GREAT NORTHERN, BURLINGTON AND NORTHERN PACIFIC ' REMOVE OBSTACLES y St. Paul. Minn. Definite plana for the merger of the Great Northern and the Northern Pacific railways may be ready for presentation to the interstate commerce commission within ninety days. This information was given to the Associated Press by Ralph Budd, president of the Great Northern, who said details of the plan are being worked out now in frequent conferences of the rail officials. Through ownership of 97 per cent of the stock of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy railroad these roads also would control operation of that line, effecting a system totaling 28,000 miles. Consolidation of the three railroads has been desired by those roads for the past twenty-fiv- e years, Mr. Budd said, detailing the steps that had been taken by the roads in an effort to effect the consolidation. If the merger Is approved by the interstate commerce commission the consolidated system will have a capitalization of more than 1850,000,000 and a combined valuation of around $1,500,000,000. New Minerals Bill Offered Chairman Sinnott of Washington the house public lands committee, at the request of the interior department, introduced in the house the following bill authorizing the issuance of patents for lands containing deposits of copTimothy Declared Poor per and associated minerals: Section Feed for Producing Milk 1. That, in the discretion of the secreof the interior, locations made unClover, alfalfa and other legumes tary der the lode mining laws of the United make far better hay for dairy cows States upon unreserved public lands und produce better milk than the best cluimed to contain, at depth, copper timothy, says C. C. Hayden, chief of and associated minerals, the actual exdairy husbandry, Ohio experiment sta- istence of which can be demonstrated Yet questions coming to his tion. only through deep shafts or other deep department daily reveal the fact that underground workings, may be passed many farmers still feed their milk to patent upon evidence satisfactory to cows timothy hay and corn stover. him of the mineral character of the The milk front cows fed timothy land, without the requirement that aphay or stover und dry grains Is low In plicants show actual discovery of minvltamlnes, Mr. Hayden continues, and eral upon or within the limits of their Is not ns valuable for children as that claim or claims; provided, that not to from cows fed bright legume hay. If exceed 640 acres of land may be lotimothy must be grown for hay It Is cated, held, applied for by, or patented best If cut very soon after the heads to, any one individual or corporation appear. under the provisions of this act. SecIf no clover or alfalfa Is coming on tion 2. That the secretary of the infor use next winter, the best substi- terior is authorized to make any rules tutes are so.v bean hay or field peas and regulations necessary to carry and oats. The peas and oats are seed this act into- effect. ed together as soon as the ground can be prepared and the soy beans are Bundle Postal Rate Loses Out speded after danger of frost. An amendment to the Washington postal laws which would fix a special Value of Lime Learned rate for newspaper publishers, was disapproved by the senate post office comFarmers by Progressive grow legumes success fully without the use of lime, and we cannot Improve our farm lands to any great extent without legumes. Fur thermore, legume crops, besides drawing nitrogen from the air and storing it In soils for the benefit of other crops, and supplying organic matter which Is necessary to enrich the land furnish the very best feed for live stock. It Is an old saying that a limestone It is alcountry Is a rich country ways a good couutry for producing clover und the grasses and tine cattle, horses, sheep und bogs. But any soil can be made a limestone soil by up plications of pulverized limestone, and for this reason the use of lime Is on the increase In all lime-leasections where farmers haye progressive learned something of Its value. Salt Lake For the first eleven days of the month of January the precipitation was better than a half inch above normal, acording to reports made at the local weather bureau. Wednesday there was a precipitation of .38 f an inch, so that with the precipitation of .65 for the day before the total for the two-dasnow-storwas 1.03 inches. This brings the total for the month to 1.06, which is better than the normal precipitation for the first third of the nionth. While much of the snow has melted, an inch and one-hal- f depth was measured by the weather observers.,.- Moab The municipal water system ' of Mpab .which is operated by the Moab Pipe Line company is in better condition than it has ever been to ' x'ender service to its patrons, according to a report made to the stockholders of the company at their annual meeting by Secretary John Peterson. Trio of Transcontinental. Roads Wil Be Ready in Ninety Days, Budd Says s We cannot News Notes ! Ogden The price which Utah grow-1- , ers will receive for tomatoes during ! 1927 will be $11 a ton, it was announced by Martin P., Brown, president of the Utah state farm bureau federation, and Joseph F. Barker, secretary of the Utah canners associa-tion- . Salt Lake A total of 4,690,342 tons of coal, with a value of $11,991,000,' was produced ia Utah during 1925 by 4441 miners engaged in the work, according to the report of L. Mann and F. G. Tryon, which was issued by the bureau of mines of the department of commerce on January 8, 1927. The J. C. Peppard Seed My ton company, with offices at Duchesne Roosevelt and Vernal, report on unexpected rise in the alfalfa seed market. No. 1, $16.50; No. 2, $15'.00; No. 3, $12.50; No. cent over 4, $9.23; extra No. 1, 5 perNo. 1. Some of the alfalfa seed growers who have been holding their seed are busy hauling it to market. s Salt Lake More than 1000 jack are claimed to have bepn killed in the Salt Lake sportmens rabbit drive - rab--bit- ia Rush valley. Approximately 150 hunters made the trip, averaging from three to thirty rabbits each. My ton William Lowe, manager of. the Uintah Basin Seed Growers association, in reporting for the season of 1926, states that the plant has handled nearly 1,000,000 pounds of alfalfa seed, the largest percentage being owned by members of the organization. In the plant at the beginning of 1927 there was 500,000 pounds of seed unsold. Part of this is in the pool formed by N. L. Feterson, while-thbalance is held by individual growers. Price Total expenditures of $222,; are contemplated in the Carbon county budget for 1927, as fixed at the meeting of the county commissioners 209.18 Monday. Vernal Supervisor A. G.j Nord of mittee. The committee offered a fa- the Ashley national forest, in his anvorable report on a ' section of the nual report to the district forester at proposed new legislation which would Ogden, states that the herd of deer on restore third class mail rates effective this forest numbering approximately before the 1925 legislation increasing 1500 head, made a slight increase durrates to raise salaries of postal em- ing the past year. Acording to the ployees. A two-cen- t service charge for same report, the mountain sheep, numfourth class or parcel post matter, bering about thirty-fiv- e head, and the which was approved by the house, was band of forty elk remained stationery ordered stricken out of the measure, in number. while the plan for a flat rate. handling Provo The Provo Timpanogos charge of 25 cents on maii of this Farm Loan association will elect offclass was approved. icers 21 from Guadalajara state that twenty-onpersons have been killed and ten wounded in a clash between Catholics and the Municipal authorities in the town of Cocula in the state of Jalisco. The mayor of Cocula and the local deputy, Sostenes Castillo, were among hose killed. The dispatches, which Ohio Flocks Increased were lacking in details, reported that Egg Production in 1926 the municipal authorities offered opThe average production of the poul position to a religious demonstration ti.v demonstration Hocks In Ohio has whereupon the Catholics attacked muIncreased from 5)7 eggs for the first nicipal officials, employes and police-mea battle ensuing. nine months of 1525 to 111 eggs per hen for the past nine months of this influenza Sweeps Throughout Japan poultry year. in this Tokio A total of 690 persons, mostFlock owners project of the Ohio State university ly children, have died in Tokio in the agree to keep cost and production rec- last ten days as the result of the epi-'- j ords. Specialists from the university demic of Influenza which is sweeping help the owners to keep their flocks in Japan. Since last November there best possible condition. These flocks haye been 2368 deaths attributed to solve as practical demonstrations ol the disease. The governments health wlmt proper methods and care will do department has been fighting hard Lemonstratiou Hocks are expected tc to prevent the spread of the epidemic. double the state average production Desert Giving Up Old Secrets per hen tills year. Last year the aver age hen in the state produced TO eggs Phoenix, Ariz. Relentless, uncomeach, while the demonstration Hocks promising, the Arizona desert, sep-euch. 138 eggs averaged ulchre of the bleached bones of the unwary traveler, prospector and "desert rfit, who disappeared from the William Pitts Advice ken of cities to fare forth in a search to Plant Trees Was Fit for hidden treasure, is being forced to The Aurora (III.) Beacon News says give up its dead by the encroachment William Ieun advised the colonists to of civilization. plant trees in one acre in every five When he Said it the country vvat Hearings End on Indian Bill e' Poulton. i Garfield At an expenditure of approximately $45,000 a road will be con- n structed from Kanarraville to the Washington county line, a distance of four and miles, the state road commission decided Monday afternoon. Garfield county commissioner were also advised by the commission that a road north from Panguitch would be constructed as soon ap federal aid ' funds can be obtained. - . - at its regular annual meeting, which will be .held January 15 in the high school auditorium. members of the associatidn are requested to be present, according to Secretary Ralph Killed, Ten Hurt in Mexican Clashes Mexico City Special dispatches one-hal- f The Utah Poultry ProMyton ducers asosciation, in compiling the results for 1926 relative to turkey growers, state that those who shipped through them received a net return of 41 cents a pound. The bulk of turkey shipments went to New York and New Jersey markets, but ,t?n thousand pounds were delivered to the west coast markets from the Uintah-basin. Price j, j j An active campaign to se- cure a state experimental farm bon im. CarUtah re- county for the eastern gion Is being carried on and will come to a head in the next few days with the introduction of a hill in the state legislature. A great deal of interest is being taken by Carbon county representatives in the legislature, by the farm bureau, the chamber of commerce. taxpayers association and other civic organizations. Bountiful Rock work has started woods and not much else, and Bonn's Washington The house Indian af- on the tunnel that is being driven by advice sounded foolish. But today we have Sl.OOO.ODO acres fairs committee concluded hearings on contractors on- Bountiful city farm in of Idle land in the 1ii'ted States, most the Hayden bill authorizing the leas- an effort to increase that citys water if it east of the Mississippi river, and ing of oil lands in executive order InThe contractors supply. who for the a in tim dian reservations, and then approved are confronted with shortage past two or three weeks have cleared -- the first four sections of the bill. Secher. the overburden which covered T.tc center of the lumber Industrj tion 5 gave rise to some discussion, sway the rock strata have now penetrated and mountain coun !u its the consideration went Is Rocky over until today the rock several feet. Faster progtry. For the eastern states that mean? Monday, four members of tbe commit- ress is exptected now that the actual big freight bills. It Is not too Irte tee seeming inclined to oppose the bill is under way. To date no tunneling V of Penn's the because advice even now, to take point raised by the president in his veto of a similar bill last water has been encountered. The obneed trees. jective of the tunnel is placed at 500 session. feet. . |