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Show 4 THE RICH COUNTY REAPER RANDOLPH, UTAH THE RICH COUNTY REAPER matter Feb. Entered as second-clas- s 8. 1929. at the post office Randolnh. Utah, under the Act of Mar. 3, 1879. Wm. E. Marshall, Editor and Prop. SUBSCRIPTION $1.50 Per Year in Advance Howe About: By ED HOWE 1938. Bell Syndicate. WNU Service. CARELESS people had a specially warning during the de- pression ; everywhere one hears the careful did much better, although The same every one was Injured. story comes from the California earthquake: those who built strong houses realized that they lived In an earthquake section suffered much less than the occupants of houses carelessly thrown together, and neglected after There seems no they werebuilt doubt that carelessness is one of the very worst of our human sins. PUZZLES Hugh had Just received word, along with the rest of the men In his department, that they were to work only a short time. Each was trying to find a silver lining In the dark cloud. To him, newly married, It looked very dark. Finally he was heard to observe: Guess Ill get caught up on my sleep now. Another, who had been married longer, asked: Havent you got caught up since you quit having dates? Hugh replied : Its worse than ever now, since we both are puzzle fans. Indianapolis News. jig-sa- When the age of reason arrives if it ever does we will admit that the man who goes about turning off unnecessary lights left burning by careless people, is a better man than the mean persons who left them burning because the expense is not charged to them. We will also like better the string saver. Few families keep a supply of new string or hand ; when string Is needed, It usually comes from a saving woman who has a ball In the drawer of the kitchen table. man asks me : Who In your opinare the fifteen greatest living Americans? 1 have written him I believe they are comparatively unknown men; some of them possibly hidden away In small towns or on farms. Most of the noted men of the present have been called to Washington to advise President Hoover or President Roosevelt in the present emergency. Not one of them measured up to real A OUT AND IN ion greatness She-- -l He Just love a good evening out too, if it wasnt for I would, the morning in. Beating the Wind During a severe gale at Flamborough in Yorkshire a treasury note . was blown out of a womans hand and was quickly lost to sight She took another piece of paper and let that blow away, too, and a nimble friend who followed it saw it corne to rest under a wall, where, lamong a heap of litter, was the missing note! She had beaten the "wind by her presence of mind. Montreal Herald. Greeting Them All Rastus was seated in his office when the phone rang. Hello, is this Rastus? came the voice over the wire. Who is Yes, replied Rastus. this? This is Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, lawyers. Oh, said Rastus, Good morning, good morning, morning. good Utica morning, good Observer-Dispatc- h. Utilizing Talent man who doesnt know how to said the confidential friend, bluff, should not play poker. Yes," answered Mr. Dustin Stax, and a man who is really an artist In bluffing shouldnt limit himself to anything so small as a card game. A Exception Nothing that Is false ever does anybody any good, said the soapbox orator. I have false teeth and they do me a lot of good, retorted an old man in the audience. OUT OF DATE the recommendations In I have seen In print. My correspondent also wishes me to prepare a list of fifteen of the greatest Americans In all our history. 1 have only three clearly In mind: Benjamin Franklin would head the list, followed by Alexander Hamilton and John Adams. If urged to add other names, possibly I should select John D. Rockefeller, Sr., J. P. Morgan the elder, and Thomas A Edison. I have never believed George Washington was truly great, We have and doubt Lincoln was. never had a great soldier, except possibly some unknown man who never had a chance. Measured by world standards we have never had a great literary man. Henry Wallace, grandfather of the present secretary of agriculture, was a country parson and farmer, and came very near greatness. If an Infallible list .of the fifteen greatest Americans, living or dead, could be prepared, few would be wides of them ly known ; perhaps not known at all. I do not believe one professional politician would be on the list; several business men might make It The manner In which we marched cheering Into the present American ruin, and the weakness we displayed In efforts to get out, have greatly discouraged me as to Ameritwo-third- can greatness. No little fairy attends any man to bring him good luck; no little devil attends any man to bring him bad luck. In the course of a year or a life, what baseball players call the good and bad breaks are about even. Good breaks have come to all of us frequently, and we have not taken proper advantage of them ; frequently we all fail to handle bad breaks as well as we might. This Is the truth, and 1 know It well, believe Is I am the but what man in the world. 1 I came to Miama, Fla., this winter, disgusted because Hannah, the colored woman we employ at home, never en tered my room without putting the windows down, if 1 had them up, or putting them up if had them down. 1 have been disgusted All winter in Miami because Nancy, at the apartment house where I live, does the same thing. I was walking on the streets lately with a white woman from Indiana. She learned bossy ways as a school teacher when young. The tilt of my hat brim didnt suit her, so she reached over and changed it Occasionally (not often) I rebel, and said to her : Put that hat brim back where yo 1 Did they do anything unusual aft, er they were married? Why, yesl They stayed married. Neighborly Love Tramp The lidy next door gave me a piece of cake. Wont you give me somethin, too? Lady Yes, Id better give you a digestive tablet . ome-niad- Cook That Steak CARE WITH POULTS MAKES TURKEYS PAY b-uc- JIG-SA- 0 Age of Reason Great Americans e Strong, Anyway "Now this, said the antique dealer proudly, is a very interesting piece a William and Mary chair." Bit small, Isnt it? asked the cusLooks as though Mary must tomer. have sat in Williams lap. found it. She is probably telling around now that I am no gentleman, but she did it I have never suited women; always there is something about me they want to fix. ' As soon as a fool proposes another plan for more human betterment than is possible, the people should somehow have the power to say to him ; Now, now, weve tried that," and force him back to work. The certain thing seems to be we cannot afford to try all these plans ns we have been doing some thousands of years to the violent disturbance of industry and Deace. Brooding Period Is Always Most Critical Time. Getting the poults through have a very hot fire for its cooking and must be turned often. If you lack a broiler, heat a heavy frying pan very hot, grease it a little with a piece of the fat from the meat, the steak quickly on both sides and Each, sear Many Methods, and turn often. After it Is almost of Course,' Is the Best ; brown enough, lower the heat slightly. As fat cooks out, it must be As to Sauces. poured off so that the pan keeps as as possible. Personally, I will Steaks, their cooking and serving, dry and sauces to accompany the popu- eat with delight, steak, properly cooked In the first place, with or lar masculine dinner-tablstandby, sauce. without an are thus dealt with by authority on the subject: Currant Jelly Sauce. Discussion waxed hot the other 1 teaspoon flour 1 teaspoon mustard evening among a group of men and 1 tablespoon melted butter women, and what do you think it 1 tables-poovinegar was about? not the depression or cup boiling water the war in China but about food. 2 egg yolks Vt teaspoon salt The food that created the greatest Pepper steak. discussion was the 9 tablespoons currant jelly Each of the men was convinced that Cayenne he could cook steak better than anyMix flour and mustard. Add butone else in the world. There was the man who uses char- ter, vinegar, water and egg yolks. coal briquets in the fireplace for the Stir over boiling water until thick. steak, which he brings forth Add seasonings and beat in jelly. black but not burned on the outside, Serve at once. WNU Service. 1933, Bell Syndicate. rare and juicy inside, and covered with a quarter pound of butter for sauce.- - There was the other man who uses the coal furnace for broiling but insists that no butter should be added to obscure the natural Revest Hotel flavor. There was the man who. i is other facilities, lacking perfectly satisfied with his electric broiler. He scores with roquefort cheese, A woman contributed a more elaborate method which included a small tenderloin for each person. This is surrounded by a ring of bacon. The steak itself is covered with minced garlic and chili sauce with a dash of Worcestershire and is then baked In a very hot oven. Another woman told about the cubed round steak cut into pieces for serving and broiled quickly under a very hot fire. This steak is prepared by the butcher, who uses a machine which cuts the connective tissues and thus enables us to broil the less expensive cuts of meat. At this special butcher 200 Tile Baths 200 Rooms shop, steak of this type costs about 7 cents a portion. Radio connection in every room. It is often possible to get round RATES FROM $1.50 cut rather thin for minute steaks, oppotUt Mormon Tobemacl t Jtut which will be tender because the beef has hung a long time in the ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Mgr. interest of tenderness. These less expensive cuts do have more flavor than the other. If you buy a tenderloin steak be ENJOY A TRIP TO sure to have the tail ground and either skewered into the steak or SALT LAKE AND keep it to flavor a casserole dish or a sauce for an omelet, rice, or NEWHOUSE noodles the next day. There were further points of discussion in regard to sauces whether they should be used or not, and if so, what kind. The favorites were parsley-lemobutter (maitre dhotel sauce) and bernaise, that variation of hollandaise and whipped cream with horseradish. To this last I like to add some scraped apple. Discussion about sauces is often Inconsistent. I find that many persons who scorn a sauce for meat demand the ketchup or chili sauce bottle to cover the steak at the table, and the mustard jar as often.' By MRS. J. H. WATERS. Pro, W. E. SUTTON. Mgr. the way, a mustard butter sauce Is delicious with either meat of fish. I 400 Rooms 400 Baths particularly like it with hamburg $2.00 to $4.00 steak. tf C Family Room d C Onions and mushrooms are also 4 or 5 Persons 7 delicious accompaniments for steak, TWO PERSONS whether you call them sauce or not. r O cn (TOCn wll A uli Choice Outside You may smother the onions or Room with Bath french fry them. Baked raw sweet onions of the Spanish type are deTHE HOTEL licious arranged in overlapping layers on the broiled steak before it SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH comes to the table. However you cook steak it must No One Way to the brooding period into free range is the most difficult Job in turkey raising, and this requires management and clean sanitation. "The first requirement for a successful hatch with turkeys Is the use of strictly fresh eggs, says C. J. Maupin, extension poultryman at North Carolina State college. When turkey hens are confined to a small range or yard, the eggs may be gathered twice each day and. then room or stored In a cellar where the temperature Is not over 60 degrees. It is better to set the eggs when only seven to eight days old, whether a hen or incubator' is used. When poults are first hatched they are less active than cfiicks and must be kept warm. The temperature in the brooder house needs to be kept around 90 degrees for several., days. Maupin says the homemade brick brooder may be used for poults, but it is well to make some wire partitions In the house to separate the ages. Feeding the poults is about the same as for baby chicks. eggs with some of the shell left In has worked out well for the first feed. Give one egg to each twenty poults. Water should be given at 36 hours, and the first chick starter or chick scratch given by the second day. Sour skimmilk may be added when the poults are from 36 to 48 hours old aud then kept before them thereafter at all times. also suggests gradual Maupin changes In feed as the birds grow older and then when they are ready for the range, the ration may be simplified and reduced to whatever grains are available on the farm. well-ventilat- Hard-boile- d Poultry Meat Deserves Attention and Thought The production of poultry meat deserves more attention and thought If the maximum profits are to be, derived above the labor and feed coSts. . The different breeds of chickens vary in the ultimate size of body at maturity. Valuable data have been found in an analysis of the present edible meat to the live and dressed bird, with crate-fe- d stock representing four different types commonly kept by farmers and commercial pouitrymen. weeks old of Roasters, twenty-eigh- t four leading , breeds, were carefully weighed and the amount of edible meat in relation to live weight determined. Buff Orpingtons showed slightly over 50 per cent of the live weight to be edible ; Rhode Island Reds. 49.10 per cent; Plymouth Rocks, 49.06, and White Leghorns, 43.63 per cent. This wide range between the heavier types and the Leghorns points out the necessity of disposing of the Leghorn males as broilers rather than carry them to the roaster stage. The heavier stock eat more feed but not relatively more for the weight attained at maturity. Very little difference exists between the types in dressing percentage, but the per cent edible meat to dressed carcass Is quite striking. The difference of 12 per cent edible meat as shown between the Orpington and the Leghorn, and 10 per cent between Red or Rock and the Leghorn, Indicates the relative difference of the two general types for the production of meat. Montreal Herald. Cull Out Weaklings When putting chicks out on the range it Is a good plan to discard everyone that as you handle it seems to you to be notably below the average of the lot in substance and vitality. The tendency is to keep any which are regarded as having a chance to grow to marketable size. This is done with the Idea that if one eventually gets something for such a chick, he Is better off than if be killed It at this stage. e , well-know- n . - - two-inc- h . Salt Lake City's .a - HOTEL TEMPLE SQUARE y n 3 NEWHOUSE tkouqkt alb cfaiolmv dAcami Mink until' J ft' -- wehJb M-ed- s onoco ef hona V While theres life, theres hope, may be a good motto in some things, but not In managing hens and chickens. If one will beep theweaklings, let him put them In a flock by them-- , selves, away from the others, and keep a separate account of their feed and of what they bring when sold. Instant Eggs With Watery Whites and k p . dition of the fre-oue- nt anti-knoc- in all degrees of temperature . . . lightning in new or old pick-ucars . longer mileage established by routine trips . . and bountiful power in evidence 'Where eggs are discovered to have watery whites and weak yolks after a heavy laying period the exhausted conrgans is the cause, according to a poultry expert In the spring there Is a tendency for eggs to become watery due to the Increase in water and green feed A properly balanced raconsumption. tion in addition to the green feed should be fed at all times, especially during the spring months. The collection will also help. starting improved GASOLINE all the time. These convince- - everybody ! ft |