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Show PIUTE COUNTY NEWS, JUNCTION, UTAH News Notes Live in It's a Privilege to Utah Salt Lake City. More cattle and calves were slaughtered during the first six months of 1926 under federal inspection than in any other corresponding period in the history of the country, according to the cattle report issued through the office of George A. Scott, federal livestock statistician for the seven Western states, Thursday. The estimated number of killed during this period is set at over head. This would mean if the slaughter continues at this rate more than 15,000,000 head will be slaughtered 'during the year. Salt Lake City. Approximately ten cars of apricots have'been shipped out of Davis county so far tills Heason to eastern cities, according to It. I). Needham, traffic manager of thp H.miber-ge- r Electric. Mr. Needham said that about fifteen more carloads would be moved out of the same territory. The Smith Canning Clearfield. south of company plant a half-mildearfleld was destroyed by fire shortly after 3 o'clock Wednesday morning. The loss is estimated at $100,000 in canned goods and $20,000 in machinery, plant und fixtures, although the damage may prove to be as much e as $150,000. Salt Lake City. Though the wind, rain and hail of recent storms damaged some wheat and fruit, Ihey were generally beneficial to crops and ranges by lowering temperatures and creating much needed moisture. In dication of this is given in the weekly crop and range report Issued Wednesday by J. Cecil Alter, meteorologist in charge of the local office of the weather bureau." Salina. Salina canyon In Sevier county will be closed to traffic on Friday, according to the state road commission, due to the fact that the Denver & Rio Grande Western railroad Is constructing a track through the miles. canyon a distance of twenty-siThe line has given assurance that it will make a passable detour as quickly as possible and it is believed that this will be done within a few days. GOVERNMENT SETS UP MACHINERY TO ENACT UNLIMITED POWERS LAW dom Initial Steps Contemplate Sharp Curtailment of Expenses Everywhere; Dollar and Serling Quoted High for Franc arranges Ever success, If you'll only hold on. FOOD FOR TODAY Cream puffs made very small and with creamed cheese are dell- clous accompaniments to a salad. The onion being one of our most valuable vegetables, should be used freely all through the year. Prepare tender new onions for a salad by slicing and seasoning well, then cover with sweet cream and serve. A sprig of parsley eaten after onions will re- move the objectionable odor. Onions Stuffed With Nuts. Cook even-sizeonions in boiling salted wa- ter until tender. Remove the centers, chop . them and mix with butter, chopped nuts and bread crumbs. Fill the onions with this mixture and pour around them a thin cream or rich milk, or any broth ; bake as usual. Strawberry Bouches. Cover timbal molds with rich biscuit dough and bake In a hot oven. Fill while warm with crushed and sweetened strawberries, top with a meringue and brown In a moderate oven. Garnish with quartered berries and serve well chilled. Vienna Steak. Take half a pound each of veal and lean beef; chop, season-wel- l with salt, pepper, onion Juice and a grating of nutmeg. Cook over coals or under gas. Serve with creamed butter and paprika spread over, the steak. Marmalade Tart. Fill a pastry-line- d plate with any desired marmalade apple, plum or grape. Cover the top with rings cut from a cored peeled apple. Sprinkle with lemon Juice and sugar and bake for half an hour. Serve with spoonfuls of whipped cream, or cream cheese In each ring of apple. Filled Rolls. Cut a slice from the top of rolls, scoop out the centers, brush with melted butter and ml with any creamed dish such as fish, chicken or vegetable. Sprinkle with parsley and serve. Cook string beans for several hours with a piece of firm, salt pork, Season sometimes with minced parsley, onloifr chives1 or cheese. Koumiss. Dissolve of a yeast cake In a fourth of a cupful of water and add It with a third of a cupful of sugar to a quart of new milk. Stir until the mixture Is well blended, then put Into bottles; tie down the corks If used and put In a warm place hours. Open to stand for twenty-fou- r carefully and serve In small quantities. In extreme cases of nausea, koumiss has often saved much suffering as It Is retained by the weakest jStorn-acfilled Paris. Spurred by sterling at 200 and the dollar at 41, a new low record for the franc, the government has decided to ask parliament to vote the unlimited powers bill within forty-eigh- t hours after discussion on that measure opens. The cabinet council recently approved the text of the bill on which M. Caillaux is working and it will be referred to the finance committee o$ the chamber with exhortation for all possible haste so that the bill may be ready for consideration by next Tuesday. This, however, means another week delay and increased nervousness in financial circles as well as- - among small operators on the Bourse and the middle classes, and the temper of the country appears to be rising. The bill will contain only one article and one annex, which explains within what limits the government intends to use the unlimited powers to legislate by decree. The deliberations of the cabinet council have been kept is secret, but reliable information that the government demands the right to legislate on all questions of a purely financial nature, such as fixing the rate of taxes and custom and the negotiation of loans, the proceeds of which might be used In defense of the franc. No decision on purely administrative reforms could be made under this bill. Fires Spread To Wide Area Seattle. With reports of blazes In many sections, the Pacific northwest coast and Into the interior as far as Calgary, Alberta, and Sbokane, Wash., lay under a wave of lightning, heat and fires that began a week ago. Blazes were also reported in the Santa Monica mountains of southern California. A fire near Port ' Orchard across Puget Sound from here, gaining headway by shift of wind, destroyed one home and threatened another. Sixty state fire fighters reinforced by fifty sailorsfrom the navy yard battled this blaze, which threatened Port Orchard. Reports from Portland indicated conditions in Oregon were better than those in Washington and British Columbia. Spokane listed fires In the Kaniksu national forest north of that city as out of control. Tourists were pressed into the fight. Canadian fires across the bolder into the Colville forest in Washington were burning steadily. Vernal. Wm. Prqece, Uintah county game warden, is directing trapping of beaver in Brush creek at a point near where the stream enters the Green river, fifteen miles east of Vernal. The captured, furbearers will be transported to Trautr?rek, a stream of the Ashley national forest, Ith the consent of the forest offiduls, and if a sufficient number is trapped some will be taken to what is known as the Davenport beaver dams in the Diamond mountain region. Roosevelt. For more than a week showers have been gratefully received over the Uintah basin, and on July 8 and 9 the showers became more general until the entire busin received a good soaking. Nearly all of the alfalfa seed needed a little moisture, alTrade Board Issues Orders though some of the lands did not need The federal trade comWashington it. However, in most cases, the rain has been of very great value to all mission fired another volley of cease and desist" orders Thursday at silvercrops, seeds included. ware manufacturers in its effort to Salt Lake City. Despite the dry stamp out the practice of misbranding season, the potato, peach and corn silver-plateto indicate that products crops of Utah are expected to show were in made Sheffield, England. a considerable increase over the pro- they Orders were handed down directing duction of last year, while most of the that the use of the word Sheffield by other crops will show a decrease, acitself, or in any combined form, or as to a issued cording recently by a part of any symbol, should be abanreport Frank Andrews, federal agricultural doned by the following firms: Ontario statistician for Utah. Silver company, Muncie, Ind.; H. O. Salt Lake City. The 1926 sugar Rogers Silver Company, Taunton, beet acreage in Utah is about the Mass.: Superior Silver Company, Inc., same as last year, but in Idaho there Brooklyn, N. Y.; Jacob Busch; Samis a reduction of approximately 10,000 uel E. Bernstein, Inc., Hemill Silveracres, it is noted in the sugar beet ware company, and A. L. Wagner Manforecast issued recently by Frank Anufacturing company, all of New York drews, Utah statistician with the deCity. partment of agriculture. The Utah Huqe Forests of Northwest Damaged acreage this year is calculated at Missoula, Mont. The most critical acres, the area harvested last fall. Idahos 1926 crop will come from 29,- - fire conditions of the year exist in forests and weather 000 acres, whereas the 1925 acreage northwestern was 38,000 acres. forecasts hold out no hope of relief. A fire in the Blackfeet forest covered Salt Lake City. Plans to do betacres, making its toterment work amounting to about another thousand 5000 acres. It Is one of the extent tal $5000 to cover the expense of the work most dangerous fires in the district. was received and the work will begin C fires, those embracat once. It is planned to widen the Sixteen class or more acres, are raging ten ing acin road Boxelder canyon. The in the Lolo forest and an counting department also received a unknown number of the same class check for $2565 from Boxelder cohnty of fires are uncontrolled in the Pend to cover its portion of the cost of forest. dOreille on the constructing the bridge project. Tariff Commission Furnishes Studies Myton. The annual meeting of the Washington. Progress by the UniStockholders of the Uintah Basin Seed years ago the dominion was without Growers association of Myton will be series of farm cost studies, chief of held Tuesday, July 13 at 2 p. m. The which is. milk and cream production election of officers and other business in the United States and Canada, was of importaince will come up. Over 100 outlined in a report made public reseed growers are members of this orThe commission has under cently. and ganization, and for the year 1925 about way studies of peanut, cotton seed production costs, and it 2,000,000 pounds of seed was handled in this plant. William Gentry of Ioka has completed its studies of the cost is president and William Zowe is secof production of wheat, butter, sugar beets and Swiss cheese. retary. 71,-00- soy-bea- n Salt Lake City Ranges in Utah have for the most part declined in condition since June 1 and lack of moisture and stock water is reaching a serious stage in places, it is indicated in the July range and livestock condition report of G. A. Scott, regional livestock statistician with the department of agriculture. The condition of ranges is given in this report as 93 per cent normal, compared with 99 per cent June 1 and 96 per cent July 1 of last year, and 72 per cent the same date two years ago. Never give upt There are chances and changes Helping the hopeful, a hundred to one; And, through the chaos, high wis- Canada Consdiers Ban On Dogs Toronto, Ont. Canada is considering barring American dogs. Four yeras ago the dominion was without a case of rabies, but now, according to Dr. C. M. Anderson of the provincial board of health, Canadians fear an epidemic of that disease, which is believed to be brought here by American dogs. At Harrow, in Essex county, a dog bit several people. All were compelled to take the Pasteur treatment. Remedial action, with the exclusion of American dogs, """Wi y! d one-fourt- h Foods for Occasions. are looking for something new and when a combination a little unYVe usual Is presentwe wish to ed, try It. ' Sq u a b M I r Prepare squabs as for roasting, broil five minutes in broth, then remove them. Slit them down the back without breaking the breastbone, season with salt and popper, cover with egg crumbs and cook in butter fifteen minutes. Garnish with small onions and potatoes browned in batter. Braised Tongue. Cook beef tongue slowly for two hours or until tender, skiff it and put it Into a casserole. Melt three tablespoonfuls of butter, add three of flour and cook until smooth ; add a pint of broth in which the tongue was cooked and a pint of stewed and strained tomatoes. Cook until thick, adding one chopped onion and a half a carrot finely minced, half a tublespoonful of Worcestershire sauce, a few dashes of red pepper and the tongue. Cover and simmer for two hours. Serve from the casserole. Raspberries a la Astor. Take two cupfuls of raspberries, add a little lemon Juice and powdered sugar and a pinch of nutmeg. Mix thoroughly with whipped cream and flavor with maraschino. Sprinkle with pistachio nuts finely minced; place on Ice to chill for two hours before serving. Peach Pudding. Pour a cupful of hot milk over a cupful of dry bread crumbs and let stand five minutes add a half cupful of sugar, the well, beaten yolks of three eggs and the stiffly beaten white of one.. Mix well and bake In a moderate oven until firm. Heap thinly sliced peaches well sweetened over the top and cover with a meringue made of two egg whites and three tablespoonfuls of sugar. Cover the pudding with the meringue and bake a delicate brown. Cake crumbs make a more delicate pudding Another nice peach dessert is birds-nes- t pudding. Make a biscuit batter and pour over sliced peaches. Bake and invert the pan. Add sugar and , butter and serve. Scalloped Potatoes With Sausages. Arrange scalloped potatoes in. a baking dish and over the top place small sausages. Bake until all are well done. Serve fro mthe baking disk MICKIE, THE PRINTER'S DEVIL m The Height of Fidelity |