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Show PIUTE COUNTY NEWS, JUNCTION, UTAH YOUR HEALTH The Folks Who Know C By ANDREW F. CURRIER, M. D. By OCCUPATIONAL DISEASES come deaf from exposure to noise. HTie Kitcken Cabinet DOUGLAS MALLOCH constant I. It)), Weetero are four kinds of folks who Msion is impaired In those who THERE TT IS only within a few years that work know; The first know not at all, these diseases have been grouped if it is under strong light, particularly unsteady. And very frankly tell you soand, classified, though many of them Brewers and saloonkeepers have cenwere recognized and studied two les, when they cant recall diseases of the lungs, liver and kidneys, The , name of this, the name of thaL Ramaz-tlnlIn turies ago that is. 1713, by as the result of excesses in alcohol. Own up, and let It go at that who observed the disastrous efvaricose veins and constifects of their occupation upon metal pation are common ills with cooks, The second class will wink the eyo workdiggers, gilders, chemists and tin waiters, policemen and And try with hems and haws ' ers. salesmen. To make you think the right reply Farmers suffer from digestive disand potters do not give because. They food and from ease, poorly cooked often have emphysema of the Although they know, it might be well. overeating, though their occupation is lungs, and those who work In Perhaps be better, not to telL one of the healthiest. aud inhale carbon bisulphide, Fishermen suffer from exposure, and or those who inhale benzine and tur- The third reply right off the reel. sometimes from too exclusive a diet pentine have headache, poor sight and Whatever you inquire, of fish; sailors suffer from tuberculo- hearing, and intestinal cramps. And love their knowledge to reveal sis owing to bad quarters, poor food, Cabmen, commercial travelers and To student, sage and sire bad habits, etc. public officials are frequent sufferers Know evrythlng that comes along. Lung disease, anemia, tuberculosis from Indigestion; while instrument-player- And almost always know It wrong. and and skin disease attack tanners, blacktypewriter operators smiths, miners, bakers, millers and bookkeepers have cramp and palsies The fourth have studied long and hard. Flat-fee- band-playe- Sour Cream Take rs india-rubb- . Filling. the Cook sugar and cream to the so f t b nl I stage, add the nut meats and beat until creamy; use as filling and top for cake. Beef a la Mode. Take four pounds of the rump of beef, brown the meat In a little fat. Add five or six sliced onions and three cupfuls of boiling water. Simmer for au hour, then add of a cupful of vinegar, two or three pieces of stick cinnamon, two tublespoonfuls of brown sugar, two tenspoonfuls of granulated sugur of two teaspoonfuls caramelized, whole cloves. Simmer three hours, adding water as needed. Thicken the gravy with two tablespoonfuls of flour, after straining the broth. Date Bars. Take one cupful of dates cut Into small pieces, one cupful of conrsely chopped walnut meats, s two egg yolks, of a cupful of sugar, one teaspoonful of salt, six tablespoonfuls of flour and one teaspoonful of baking powder. Add the sugur to the egg yolks, then the flour nnd fold in the stiffly beaten whites at the last. Flavoring may be added if desired. Add the dates to the flour before adding the other ingredients. Molasses Drop Cookies. Take cupful each of butter, sugar, molasses and sour milk. Add one beaten egg, one teaspoonful of soda, two cupfuls of flour, cupful of currants or rnlsins, cinnamon, nutmeg and ginger to taste. Stir up at night and bake In the morning. Drop by spoonfuls on buttered baking sheet. Dumplings. Take one cupful of buttermilk, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, one cupful of flour, one egg and a little salt. Drop by teaspoonfuls on the boiling stew and cover quickly; cook eight minutes. Buttermilk dumplings are very tender and of good flavor. Good Things for Any Day. As we ail have various tnstes, it Is necessary In almost every family to have variety. Fruit and Nut Pudding. Soak one-hal- f pound of prunes In cold water over night, then cook In the same water until tender. Take one cupful of sugar, one and cupfuls of boiling water, teaspoonful of cinnamon; simmer ten minutes. Comof a cupful of cornbine starch with enough cold water to mix, and add to the prunes; cook until the cornstarch is well cooked. Add f cupful of nutmeats and a tablespoonful of lemon juice. Mold and chill. Jam Pudding. Take one cupful of flour, cupful of sugar, two f teaspoonfuls of baking powder, teaspoonful each of cinnamon and salt, one egg, one-hacupful of thick Jam (if thin, use cupful more of flour) and three tablespoonfuls of mazoia. Bake In a moderate oven and top with the following custard: Cook until smooth and thick s cupful of sugar, four tablespoonfuls of flour well mixed, teaspoonful of salt, one cupful of water, two egg yolks well beaten, and when cooled add a teaspoonful of vanilla. Place this topping over the pudding while It Is hot. Use the two egg whites for a meringue and brown In a moderate oven. Serve slightly cooled. Date Pie. Wash, stone and chop one package of dates. Beat two egg9 s until light, add of a cupful of sugar, one cupful of milk, one of cinnamon and one-haof salt Mix and add the dates, pour Into an unbaked pastry shell and bake In a slow oven until firm. Serve cold with whipped cream. A meringue may be used If preferred. Apple Punch. Cut six tart apples Into quarters without paring, add one cupful of raisins, two bay leaves, a small stick of cinnamon, the grated rind of three lemons and two quarts of cold water; let come to a boll and cook thirty minutes; drain and when cold add the juice of three lemons, two pounds of BUgar and serve with -- of the hands. Experience and book, Printers are often tuberculous; and Have learned with caution to regard Bad air and inhalation of particles The things at which they look; of dust Injure their lungs, teeth, mu- shoemakers, tailors and sedentary workers are victims of hemorrhoids, And men like that will tell to yon cous membrane and skin. Not what they know but think they do. and indigestion. Railroad workers have rheumatism, constipatiou In many of these cases, disease is kidney disease (from con- preventable, which is a fact every And, of the four, the first and last stant shaking) and they are always ex- working Will answer you the best; man and woman should conposed to the danger of serious or fatal sider. No constitution is so first will never lead you past The rugged Injury. The truth ; the last will test that it may not break down when the Workers in tunnels and caissons un- laws of health are persistently disre- The truth before your very eyes. der high atmospheric pressure suffer garded. For naught is certain to the wise. by McClure Newepaper Syndicate.) from blood and nerve diseases, while by Georg Matthew Adams.) those who work at great elevation, mountain climbers, aviators and others, have lung diseases on account of diminished air pressure. Bleachers who work In chlorine, sulphur and acids, aniline dye workers, starch makers and chemical workers GO CONE OH NOW, M In general, are apt to suffer from disFORE. TO SCHOOL ON eases of the lungs and the skin. last Be rings Te Athletes, and those who work In Nice fvvt. this is too got tue 've strained and trying positions, very SON- IN TH& HCRt LATIN To Gtt there often have diseases of the heart and ' J0HJ START lungs, while rupture nnd aneurism are LICKED G'T GlT LICKED A WANT of common occurrence among porters, Platin' hookET blacksmiths and draymen. THIN Come on now- beBoilermakers and riveters often FisaiN knife-grinder- s. The question of lubrication is rightly settled when you decide to give your motor the oil it needs MonaMotor OiL MonMolr Qil Company San Francisco, Cal. Los Angeles, Cal. MonaMotor Oils & Greases three-fourth- s n, ( well-beate- a 1 Don't take chancre of yonr homes or mules Lei liar laid U with Distemper, lnlluenea Ilnk Eye, Laryngitis, Heaven, Cough or Cold. Give M'OII.N'S" G both the elelt mil Hie well onrg. The nlandnrd remedy for SO yenm. Give HI'OIIN H" for Dog 00 mile and $l.fO at drug stores. SrOHX MEDICAL CO. GOSHEN, IM. Din-temp-er. Indispensable soothing and heeling for cute, scalds, burns, roughened, dry and chapped skin and For all common skin troubles, Vaseline' Petroleum Jelly hss been Indispenssble to medical men and mother for over half a century. Keep a jar or a tube handy. AS s safe, three-fourth- n CIIESEBROUOtl MFC). COMP ANT ( UwwiUainQ New York 17 Btat Street Vaseline one-hal- f bOGGONE-VD- one-ha- he Young Lady Acres the Way i-- need. one cupful of sugar and sour cream and the same of nuts. er s, eye-strai- realize The oil in your motor must stand the intense heat of 350 degrees. It must stand dilution by gas and water. Bearings hum out, cylinders are scored unless the oil remains good MonaMetot Oil under these tests. stands every test and meets every A nice cake filling which will be cherished is prepared as follows: house-servant- s, rx 2)o you TASTY FOODS t, Glass-blower- Newepaper Union.) No man haa a right to leave the world as he found It. 1I must add something to It; either he must make Its people better or happier, or he must make the face of the world more beautiful or fairer to look at. Edward Bolt. ' ) one-ha- one-ha- Jjook for lf lf ffc traU-mar- k Jt Va-Unt Left-Handedne- ss I'rof. Juno E. Ihnvnoy of (lit University of Wyoming, after studying tho result of (lie examination of IDO men and women, selected from t tie American Psychological society, lias come to the conclusion that fewer women are Ilian men, and that tho ambidextrous ones are of superior Intelligence. Furthermore, the distinction hot ween left and right Is not nearly so strong In most people as their sense of up and down. left-hande- lf WHY DRUGGISTS RECOMMEND one-thir- d ITlomers Cook Boo one-hal- No splendor of service can compen- Pineapple Sandwiches. sate for Inferior or badly cooked food. These are nice to serve with a cup A college for women which does not of tea or an iced drink. Take one The young lady across the way says send back to her home the daughter into enter cupful of shredded pineapple, we ought to give Europe our moral more willing and capable eolve them and of sugar, and home of a to the problems support but we must never forget with heartiness and grace, Is not an the Juice of halfcupful a lemon. Cook until Inwhat Lincoln said at Gettysburg about Institution of learning. It Is an thick. When cold spread on sponge stitution of unlearning. Frank entangling alliances. drops cut into halves, put together by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) . three-quarte- O sandwich fashion. HINTS AND THINGS AS TOLD BY Irvin S. Cobb THE VOICE OK PROTEST bishop of the A DISTINGUISHED Methodist African Episcopal church in North Carolina was entertaining a number of his preachers at a chicken supper, following the holding of the annual conference. Except one very small and very black presiding elder, all present were of an impressive size and bearing. So probably it was only natural that In serving the guests the host should entirely overlook the little man. Presently the time came for replenishing the plates, and now the bishop saw the small figure wedged in behind two wide, broadclothed forms. Brother Jones, he Inquired In his best pulpit voice, "will you have more chicken? More? shriiled Brother Jones, indignantly, more? Huh! I aint never had SOME yitl by tV Central Press Association) rs Gelatin Pudding. Take a half cupful or more of any fruit Juice left from canned fruit, measure, and when making prepared jello add the fruit juice Instead of water, dissolving the jello in boiling water and finish the pint with the fruit Juice. Pineapple, peach or plum Juice is especially good with lemon Jello. A little of the Juice from pickled peaches or pears adds much to the mince pie which we all enjoy. Very small baking powder biscuit broken open, buttered and spread with jam and served, make a tasty hot sandwich to serve with a cup of tea or KEEP sandwiches fresh for day, place them on a large cover with another, then and plate wrap in a towel wrung out of cold water. This method keeps them moist without being soaked in any part. When making layer cake, bake three layers. Cut one into half and use with a filling of whipped cream. Put the other together with a boiled frosting, chopped raisins and a few nuts. This will keep fresh for several days and you have two cakes with the work of preparing one. In most homes there will be an occasional slice of dry bread. This may cocoa. be soaked, added to sour milk and used for griddle cakes or make: Queen of Bread Pudding. Take one pint each of milk and 192S, Weatern Newepaper o bread crumbs, the yolks of two eggs, one cupful of sugar, a tablespoonful ON A STREET of melted butter, the Juice of half a CAR. lemon. Beat the whites of the eggs Madam, very stiff, add two tablespoonfuls of child looks older mix the and sugar, pudding powdered pour into a baking dish, cover with a than three years. Yes, Indeed he layer of powdered sugar, then lemon juice and top with the meringue. Bake does, conductor. until firm.- Serve with cream or dot That child with bits of Jelly and serve the pud- had a lot of haj ding hot TO (, that Union.) one-ha- lf one-hal- lf one-four- th three-fourth- one-ha- lf two-third- ul lf SWAMP-ROO- T For many years druggists have watched with much interest the remarkable record maintained by Dr. Kilmers , Swamp-Rootthe great kidney, liver and bladder medicine. It ia a physician's prescription. mediis a strengthening cine. It helps the kidneys, liver nnd bladder do the work nature intended they should do. Swamp-Roo- t has stood the test of years. It is sold by all druggists on its merit and it should help you. No other kidney medicine has so many friends. He sure to get Swamp-Roo- t and start treatment at once. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y for a sample bottle. When writing he sure and mention this paper. 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