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Show Hfltca l PIUTE COUNTY NEWS, JUNCTION, UTAH THE KITCHEN is CABINET (). Obi If the berry that stains my llpe Could teach me the woodland chat, Science would bow to my scholar , ship, And theology doff the heL MICHAEL BORODIN, AT HANKOW, GIVEN ULTIMATUM; MUST LEAVE AT ONCE Nationalists Move Northward; ANSWERED: 1917. Wasters Newspaper Union.) three vital questions you have asked ' - about used car allowances WINSOME DELICACIES Com- munism Has No Place In Program - 1 To dine regally and well, try some of these dishes occasionally: . Shanghai Marshal Feng Yu Hsiang who is in complete command of the northern expedition of the radical nationalist regime at Hankow, has sent an ultimatum to Hankow demanding that Michael Dorodin leave China mediately for Russia and give up his connection with, the Hankow regime, of which he has been adviser. Confirmation of Marshal Fengs which followed a conference between him and General Chiang leader of the moderate nationalists, whose headquarters are at Nanking, was obtained. At the same time it was learned that Feng and Chiang have issued a proclamation stating that communism must go and asking their troops to uphold the principles of Dr. Sun Yat-Sethe late Republican leader, for the everlasting glory of China. util-matu- Kai-She- Kellogg Filling Peace Vacancies Efforts- - are being made by Secretary Kellogg to fill vacancies' in commission of conciliation created under the group of Bryan peace treaties between the United States and foreign Sountries. Several vacancies "have occurred,. through deaths, one of them on the commission created-undethe treaty with France. Mr. Kellogg said he did not understand Ambassador Herrick, who sailed for this country with a memorandum given him by the French foreign office, was bringing a draft of the perpetual peace treat? suggested by Foreign Minister Briand. Mr. Herrick is expected in Washington to confer with Mr. Kellogg as to negotiations Washington r Economy Hits Screen World Hollywood, Calif. Fifteen of the principal motion picture producing companies followed the lead of Paramount-Famous Players-Laskin agreeing to an immediate reduction of salaries of all persons in their organizations, from the executive heads down to $50 a week employees, and including their high salaried featured actors and actresses. The agreement was made at a conference of officers of the producers, following which a statement was issued announcing the retrenchment, which embraces salary . , y reduction of. 10 to 25 per cent for executives, departmental heads and producers. All contract players, such as stars directors, actors, writers and other artists are being asked to consent to the 10 per cent salary reduction. Union Miners and Operators Confer Philadelphia Union miners and operators of. the central Pennsylvania bituminous coal fields resumed their conference here in an endeavor to reach a wage agreement. After neardiscussion the whole ly a two-hou-r subject was again placed in the hands of a subcommittee of six miners and six operators, who will continue the negotiations. Following a week of discussion in May, the conference adjourned, the operators stating that," if a reconvened meeting failed to produce results, they would abandon the temporary arrangement whereby the mines are continuing in operation under the Jacksonville agreement pending the negotiation of a new wage contract. Ham With Mushrooms, Shrimps and Peas. Fry slice of ham a half-incfor about ten minutes over a slow fire. Turn ' the ham and cover the cooked side with a dozen shrimps which have been boiled and cleaned and one-hadozen mushrooms cut into thin slices. , As. soon as the second side of the ham is cooked (about seven minutes) take(lt out and place on a warm dish In the oven. Cook the shrimps and the mushrooms about two minutes in the hot fat, then turn them onto the ham and surround the whole with cooked fresh peas. Coddled Steak. Take about two pounds of round steak cut an inch thick, season well with salt and pepper HELLO MILANI IS THAT YOU? and flour. Have ready one small onion When Miss Elizabeth M. Zanodint of the radio laboratory of the bureau chopped fine, two tablespoonfuls of of standards wants to talk to the home folks in Milan, Italy, she doesnt have butter or beef drippings heated1 very to worry about the mail service. With this receiving set and a transmitting' hot Put the meat into a hot pan to set in her home In Washington, D. C., she can establish a two-wa- y brown evenly on both sides, then add communica- tion. Miss Zunodinl Is a radio amateur and vice president of the enough water to cover well. Season ' . with salt and pepper and Worcester. Washington Radio club. shire sauce to taste. Cover tightly until the steak is and 6immer authorities themselves? the answers tender. The steadily must be basted and meat were more than four to one In favor turned frequently. Serve on a hot of the trained announcer. Asked t with some of the gravy. Garplatter indicate how they preferred farm innish with parsley or water cress. formation presented, 8,148 farmers h Muffins. Take Mountain Iron voted for some form of dialogue style, one of a of sugar, cupful 1,252,126 Rural Homes Are as against 1,497 who Indicated pref- third of a cupful of butter, tw cuperence the form. for lecture straight Now Equipped With fuls of flour, four teaspooufuls of bakImprovements Suggested. ing powder, one egg well beaten, Receiving Sets. "Among the suggestions for lmproy-in- g three-fourth- s of a cupful of milk and service were: Select speakers oue-haof salt. Cream teaspoonful State DepartUnited (Prepared by th with. good broadcasting voices; train the butter and sugar. Add the well-- , ment of Agriculture.) There are now 1,252,126 farms In broadcasters on delivery; make talks beaten yolk, the flour mixed and siftthe United States equipped with radio Short and to the point ; schedule talks ed with the baking powder, then add receiving sets, the radio service of the often enough and regularly enough for the milk and the egg white beaten Department of Agriculture announced folks to get the habit of listening ; stiff. Bake in a quick oven. This in the report of Its past seasons inject enough atmosphere or entertainmakes one dozen muffins. ment into educational programs to work Issued recently. Salmon Souffle. Take one can of This estimate was based on returns avoid their becoming dull;. and presalmon, .remove the skin and bones made by county agricultural agents pare talks in simple and every-da- y and flake, odd the yolks of two eggs, one cupful of rich milk or cream, then throughout the country and showed a terms. 12G per cent increase over the 553,008 Matiy express exasperation at per- seasoning desired and fold in the sets estimated to be on farms July, sistent, direct advertising and plead stiffly beaten whites of the eggsi Bake 1023. for some means of promptly distind 20 minutes in a pan set In hot water. Iowa led the states with 90,990 farm guishing between bona fide educationServe at once when ' radio sets, or an increase of 160 per al material and mere sales talks. nicely puffed. cent since 1923. Indiana was second In listing the farm problems in Something to Eat. with 81,144, but this figure represented which they were most interested, 3,604 Is the everyday food which we are It an Increase of 377 per cent as commentioned crops and soils; 2,321 menmost Interested in, as that is a daily tioned poultry raising, while talks on pared with the 1925 figures. ' problem. For tlio Other leading states included Mis- fruits, vegetables, and flowers were occasions when" souri with 77,510 sets; Nebraska with called for by 1,885. Live stock was we entertain are 69,784; Illinois with 65,832; Ohio with the chief interest of 1,828 and probcountless good lems in agricultural economics were 63,448, and Kansas with 62,055. tliing9 which are limited only by The largest percentage of increase, listed by 1,581. Dairying was also an the purse. however, was shown in 'Utah, where Important subject for 028. Those who en-- : the number of sets was estimated at Practically all phases of farm life Joy the palatable , , 6,061 as compared with 899 estimated were touched on. . Among the radio In 1925. programs requested were those dealeggplant may like to try this method most economical The with; ing of way are sets cooking and serving it: How farm radio being used, the program preferences of the farm- of fattening hogs for market ; clover Eggplant Pot Pourri. Boll an eggas a soil builder; improvement of ers, and their own Ideas for improvplant, without peeling, for 20 minutes, Insects control of the country roads; set forth also were or until nearly done. Drain, cut into service ing present in an analysis of replies to a question1 and rodents; marketing pork, beef half lengthwise and scoop out the cenand grain; how to make and use disters and chop fine. Simmer one-thir-d naire sent to 10,000 farm radio ownthe cow; infectants; feeding dairy of in the a cupful of chopped green pepper included report ers, and spraying and orchard care; treating and one cupful of chopped onion in Prefer Talk to Music. fence posts ; raising colts ; making . two tablespoonfuls of butter about 12 Summarizing this analysis, Sara charcoal; the production and harvestminutes. Add one cupful of chopped Pickard, former chief of the radio ing of legume hay; utilization of soft fresh tomatoes and the egg plant. These replies show timber for farm buildings ; general Season well and cook for ten minutes, service, said: that American farmers prefer rudio farm management; the farm labor add one egg yolk well beaten, stir talk to music nearly two to one. Vol- problem, and fox farming. One farmand cook until thick. Fill the egg untary comments accompanying the er asked for information on whether plant shells, sprinkle with buttered disto sell or not to sell the farm. formal answers indicate a strong bread crumbs and brown under the like for Jazz. . In music, they want Some faint Idea of the Interest of broiler flame. This dish is rich in e tunes and classical music. listeners in farm programs can be A, B and G. and can be eaten Aside from educational farm pro- gleaned, Mr, Pickard said, by the one wishing to reduce or to mainby grams, weather and market reports, requests for literature mentioned in tain weight. It is also a good laxapolitical talks are evidently popular programs prepared by the Department tive because of the vegetable fiber. and more current news programs are of Agriculture, We have received and New Carrots. Wash and scrape in demand. filled 40,857 requests for cook books carrots and cut into finger-size- d Farmers are not using the radio Issued In connection with Aunt Sampieces. Put on to cook in a thick alumerely for entertainment The days mys Housekeepers Chats, which inc- minum dish tightly covered with no work is now planned according to the idents has been one of the lilts of water. Add butter, a tablespoonful or weather forcasts sent out by the the year with housewives of America two, seasoning of salt and pepper and weather bureau and received by radio due to the original presentation of cook for an hour. Serve ns a garnish much more quickly than was formerly sound, fresh, helpful facts. A total for mutton 6tew. This dish is rich in possible. Market reports Issued by of 105,219 Farm School pamphlets Is- Iron, and vitamlnes. the Federal Bureau of Agricultural sued in connection with the aeries of Lemon Sauce. Cook together ono Economics are eagerly followed and radio lessons on live stock, dairy, and of cornstarch ' well toblespoonfulnumbers of farmers report definite poultry problems have been sent - to mixed with one cupful of sugar, then savings In dollars and cents as a re- listeners in response to requests for add two cupfuls of boiling water. -. them." ' . sult of this service. r Cook 6lowly ten minutes, then add the Not only that" said Mr. Pickard, grated rind and juice of a lemon; "but hundreds of the reports from one tabespoonfui of butter. Ether of lastly Overcrowding farmers cite Instances where the Pineapple Salad With Honey DressNo Bar to Radio Fans programs prepared by the ing. Arrange slices of fresh pineapJust why It should be thought tliul radio service and broadcast through ple on lettuce and pour over the fonearly 100 commercial and state col- radio enthusiasts will stay off the air llowing : Beat together three lege stations, have been promptly ap- because the ether lanes are overof olive oi!, two tsblespoon-fni- s ' plied to the imtnedate advantage of crowded with stations is somewhat dif a tablespoonful of . honey, of fleuit to understand. Never was autotlte Individual radio user. lemon Juice, a dash of salt and cayMany stockmen report larger and mobile purktng more difficult Nevei enne. Serve at once. more profitable pig crops, as a result was it more dangerous to be on the Bermuda Salad. Cut into fine cnbes streets and highways. - Never was a small southern oniom add twice the of the adoption of better practices outlined by radio. Others claim that in- traffic more congested. But, at the quantity of tart apple also cubed, seaformation from these radio programs same time, never were more cars sold son well with salt Hnd add a little has enabled them to got thole poultry and never was the public more keenly minced greeu pepper.. Mix well with projects on a sound financial basis. interested In; getting abort in motor salad dressing and serve on lettuce. Still, ethers report thriftier live, Stock cars. Stuffed Dates Salad. Stuff dates Some radloists have expressed their and'iinproved marketing practices ..as with nuts and cover with finely cubed a direct result of their recent radio impatience with ether traffic. They apple on a nst of lettuce. Serve with claim they have put the set away, schooling. a mayonnaise dressing. sent the batteries to wet storage and Mcve cotton on fewer acres, betCoconut, Apple and Onion Salad. ter food In the home, and more .eggs pulled down the antenna. It la just Prepare two cupfuls of cubed apple, from the chickens are listed among barely possible, however, that, oeca add a tablespoonful or two of finely the benefits received. sionaily they will use the electrle onion and a tahlespoonful of "These farm listeners, however," light, socket or .thq telephone for an chopped fresh red 'pepper, mix ufinvd finely have very aerial and risk 'a tube or two to' find Mr. f Pickard continued, 'a of grated, fresh coconut with cupful definite Ideas about how they want out whats going on. and add enough dressing of any kind In reply to Brave radloists will stay with th the programs presented. to moisten. Serve on lettuce. one question, Do you prefer lectures set and drive through the heterodyne to be given by an announcer, who can whistles as best they can. They knov ta clearly understood ; rather than by it will pay in the long run Irish Leader Again Premier .Dublin, Ireland William- T. was reelected president of the Free State . executive council by the new Dail Eireann at its first session. The session was held without the participation of Eamon de Valera and the ether deputies elected on the Fianna Fail ticket, all of whom refused to take the oath of allegiance to the king. Mr. De Valera, with a dozen col-leguse, left the Leinsterhouse after a fniiltess two hours w ait. The remainder of the republicans elected to the dail stayed, but none was permitted to approach the chamber. . Cos-grav- ' a Pershing Sees Legion Do Good Washington The visit of the Amen ican Legion to Paris in September will be the greatest pilgrimage for good will ever undertaken, General John J. Pershing said upon hi3 return from France. He plans to accompany the legionnaires be once commanded, said that in the last year the French atti tude toward America had undergone a material changer although there has always been a deep basic feeling oi friendliness. In his opinion, the visit of the legion would come at a "very propitous time." AtJSWef: Your used car has only one fundamental basis of value: that is what the dealer h who accepts it in trade can get for it in the used car market. 2 lf "Why should dealers in different makes of cars offer me allowances that differ materially? Answer: Your used car has seemingly different values because competitive dealers are bidding to sell you a new car. it true that the largest allow 3 "Is -- ance offered means the best deal for me? A nswer : The largest allowance is not necesthe best deal for Sometimes it is; sarily you. sometimes it is not. An excessive allowance may mean that you are paying an excessive price for the new car in comparison with its real value. full-fledg- Big Increase in Radios on Farms First judge the merits of the new car in comparison with its price, including all delivery and finance charges. Then weigh any difference in allowance offered on your used car. Remember that after all you are making a Purchase, not a sale. one-fourt- lf GENERAL MOTORS well-buttere- es old-tim- Liners to Carry .Planes Aboard New York Passengers will soon be catapulted in seaplanes from the deck of the Ilo de France, latest addition to tho French line fleet, to cut short the voyage across the Atlantic ocean, it was announced in a cablegram to the French line. The cablegram came from the lie de France, which is en route to America on her maiden voyage. The plans call for the seaplanes being shot from the liner off the Grand Banks, .whence they will carry passengers to seaboard cities of the United States and Canada, "What is my present car worth? A CHEVROLET PONTIAC OLDSMOBILE r OAKLAND BUICK r LaSALLE CADILLAC GMC TRUCKS YELLOW CABS AND COACHES FRIGIDAIREThe Time to Part table-spoonfu- ls . Electric Refrigerator Nothing to Flag Her Down Ardath, age five, was being taught rhilUps and his wife had always been reputed to be the happiest of some of the rudiments of reading by married couples, so when Mrs. Jones her mother,, who explained that comheard that her friend was suing for ing to a period' at the end of a sendivorce she was astonished. tence meant for her to stop. A feir You say his chief fault is his nights later, at the dinner table, she she asked Mrs. was chattering away with no noticeYou should try and endure able likelihood of there being any Phillips. that, dear. pauses, when her mother asked her I did as long as possible, replied why In the world she didnt stop talkthe latter. But when he shook down ing. She replied: I guess, mother, the player-pianand threw a music I dont see any periods. roll into the furnace, that was going too far. Hardware Age. Species of Laurel In tie United States laurel is a speJust So cies of evergreen shrub of either of Farley I understand youve trav-le- d two genera, Kalmia ' or Rhododenin Africa? In the Sudan? dron. Mountain laurel is lthododen-droFarrell No, In a roadster. maximum. mindedness? o - - n If you cant have your own way you an at least keep out of other people's way. -- You cant believe everything a woman says who.' compliments another upon her beauty. "Butch Bedbug, burglar, starts his nights work . edu-cnliou- car for every purse and purpose , 'Millions of others are i Parting, too! Be ready for them! MAKE NO MISTAKE! There's only one tcay to exterminate bedbugs. That's with a liquid. Don't waste time shooting a spray at them. No spray can possibly reach their young and eggs. Bedbugs are In the woodwork, not in the along the bed clothes, as you may have thought. Dont waste time using a powder. Bedbugs don't cat. They suck. Thats w hy only a liquid can exterminate them. base-boar- ds Petermans Discovery is the right liquid. It soaks down into their neats. It will exterminate all fummi ha th right Inoocticidm fur each in acts O ealm mh rrver ding arm kLL . bedbugs, all their young and eggs in any house in 48 hours. Here is the right insecticide each insects. PETERMAN'S DISCOVERY, minate bedbug t for nto. kin 11m J Liquid Spray l Binwpkloea, PETERMiV9 ROACH FOOD uUml- Bate eockr achea PETERMAN'S ANT FOOD ntmrmlmm FLYOSAN, ant. PETERMANS MOTH FOOD againvt moth You must hare a specific insecticide for each insect. No single insecticide will exterminate them alL We have had nearly 50 years experience. We knot that is true. mm& 200FtfU,A.,Tf. T.C. |