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Show - - - . ' JULY 1926 Tell It Through The Herald's Classified Want Ad Columns LEGAL NOTICES KITCHEN Tales of the KITCHEN CUPBOARD CUPBOARD VUi. Old Frontier By NELLIE MAXWELL minimum h-- h By NELLIE MAXWELL 1 U M l l I 1 M i h-- m 1 Bread and Cake breads and fancy cakes we buy from bakeries and food markets are good and attractive, but may be made at home, better and much cheaper. Whole-WheNut Bread. Soften one quarter of a cake of yeast In two tablespoonfuls of water; add one cupful of scalded and cooled of a cupful of dark milk, molasses, one teaspoonful of salt, two and one-hacupfuls of entire wheat flour and one cupfnl of Mix and knead until smooth. Let rise until double its bulk, adding the chopped nuts to the last kneading. Shape Into two loaves, let rise again and bake. Luncheon Rolls. Add two tableh teaspoonfuls of sugar, spoonful of salt to two cupfuls of scalding hot water; when cool add one-haof a yeast cake dissolved in two tablespoonfuls of lukewarm s water and of a cupful of flour. Cover and let rise, then add one egg well beaten, the grated rind of a lemon, two tablespoonfuls of butter and enough flour to knead. Let rise again, roll to one-haInch thickness, shape with a small biscuit cutter, place in a buttered pan let rise again and close including electric range. Heater bake. together; and electric fans. 171 W. 1st N. Maryland Beaten Biscuits. Take Phone 1028. ad d one pint of flour, of a cupful of lard, mix well and add salt and enough milk and water to FOR RENT My home aparta stiff dough. Toss lightly on ment, well furnished, 171 W. 1st make board and beat with a floured a N. Phone 1028. adv rolling pin thirty minutes, folding d and pounding the dough. Roll of an Inch In thickness, cut 40 acres of good pasture land cutter, prick with a cheap. Ira Hillyard, Smithfield, with a small bake on a buttered tin Utah. tf. fork and twenty minutes in a hot oven. Plain Sponge Cake. Beat two Hi 1 1 eggs, separating the whites and cupful of sugar yolks ; add one-haand the flavoring of a tablespoonful Of lemon juice and a bit of the rind to the beaten yolks, add one-hacupful of flour and fold In th stiffly beaten.whites, adding a pinch of shit Bake In a moderate oven By NELLIE MAXWELL until It shrinks from the pan. 1 1 1 m-- H 9i 12(, Westers Newspaper Uoloa.1 I!1II THE one-four- th lf nut-meat- one-fourt- lf three-fourth- lf 6-- White Rose Flour one-thir- 6-- one-thir- Has Always Given Full Satisfaction to Critical Cooks Once Tried; Always Used 0 0 0 SEE US BEFORE YOU SELL YOUR WHEAT; ALWAYS PREPARED TO PAY CASH 0 DEPOSIT EXCHANGE ACCOUNTS SOLICITED 0 0 All Kinds of Feed and Mill 'Products Always on Hand .0.0 o' Farmers Union Mills SMITHFIELD. UTAH 1 n mw ii'i-H-Hi- iii lf KITCHEN CUPBOARD lf HI Everyday (food Things H-- By ELMO SCOTT WATSON - Salads, Other Dishes 1923, A FEW pens left from the din- ner the previous day may be added to a salad of chopped dill pickles, peanuts and a bit of grated onion. Serve with a highly seasoned salad dressing on lettuce. Cheese and Banana Salad. Remove the skin from two bananas, scrape them and cut Into halves lengthwise. Mix one neufcliatel cheese with two tablespoonfuls of chopped mint leaves; add salt and French dressing to moisten. Spread one-hathe mixture on the slices of banana, cover with the other slices and press firmly. Cut into 6llces and arrange on lettuce ; serve with French dressing. Chopped nuts or olives may be used for variety in place of mint leaves. Joes Dressing. Take one teaspoonful of salt and mustard, two tablespoonfuls of sugar, a dash of cayenne, one whole egg, one and f tablespoonfuls of flour, two tablcspoonfuls of corn oil, one-hacupful of evaporated milk, cupful each of vineear and water. Mix the dry ingredients and cook all together in a double boiler. Tomato Jelly Salad. Take two cnpful3 of tomato juice either fresh or canned; to it add cupful of mild vinegar, two tablespoonfuls of gelatin, a tableh of a spoonful of sugar, bay leaf, two stalks of celery, two slices of onion and one and one-- ! half tablespoonfuls of lemon Juice. Stir and cook over the heat until the gelatin Is dissolved, set In a dish of crushed ice and when the jelly begins to thicken add the ten- der leaves of young dandelion cut into bits. Mold the Jelly ; turn out and garnish with scallions cut into strips and fringed at the ends. Let them stand in water until curled. Stuffed Tomatoes. Take smah even-size- d tomatoes of a good ripe color, scoop out tfie centers and fill with finely cubed cucumbers and onion well seasoned with a good salad dressing.. Serve well chilled on a heart leaf of lettuce. one-lial- lf one-four- th one-fourt- USI. Western Neirepeper tJnloa.) Advertise in The HeraH. SPONGE CAKE Is easy to A pare, usually well liked and preIs especially good for little people. Two-Eg- g Sponge Cake. Separate the whites and yolks of two eggs, beat the yolks until thick, the whites until stiff. Add one-ha- ll cupful of sugar, two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice to the yolks. Sift together with one cupful of flour, one teaspoonful of baking powder, a pinch of salt Add one-hacupful of sugar to the whites, folding It In lightly, then add the egg yolk mixture and fold In the flour very lightly ; add one-hacupful of water and pour Into a cake pan, sprinkle with sugar and bake thirty minutes. Sponge Drops. Beat five egg yolks, add one cupful of sugar, beat again until the sugar is well dissolved, add a teaspoonful of lemon extract and fold In one cupful of flour; lastly add the beaten whites. Drop in gem pans and bake quickly. Potato Cake. Take one cupful of shortening, two cupfuls of sugar, one-hacupful of milk, one cupful of mashed potato, one cupful of cupful chopped nutmeats, one-haof sweet chocolate, two and one-ha- lf cupfuls of flour, four beaten eggs, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, one-hateaspoonful each of cinnamon, cloves and allspice. Bake ns usual. Best when several weeks old. Newport Pound Cake. Cream s of a cupful of butter, add one and one-hal- f cupfuls of flour gradually and a teaspoonful of vanilla. Beat the yolks of five d eggs until thick and and add one and one-hacupfuls of powdered sugar gradually. Combine the mixtures, add the whites of the eggs beaten stiff and sift over thenr one teaspoonful of baking powder; beat thoroughly and turn Into a deep buttered pan ' to bake one hour In a moderate oven. New Beets. Cook thetender new beets, skin them and chop in a chopping bowl until fine. Return to the heat and season well with a good French dressing. Serve hot. lf lf M. W. HENDRICKS FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER CUT FLOWERS AND POTTED PLANTS Phone 61 Preston, Id Sell The Old Cow I Through The lf PLUMBING lf AND HEATING CO. PLUMBING, HEATING, WIRING AND MATERIAL Crosley and R. C. A. Radios ' lf Classified IT BE THE WHETHER TURE, OR ANYTHING OLD GOW, 1 PIECES OF FURNI- - ELSE YOU WISH TO SELL OR $ seven-eighth- BUY; LET THESE COLUMNS DO IT FOR YOU. SALESMAN. MUST BE A HUSTLER; MUST HAVE AUTOMOHANDLING BILE; FASTEST SELLING COMMODITY ON MARKET; BIG PROFITS. WRITE IMMEDIATELY TO MR. BARON BEN KAMPEN, :7th St. AND RIVERDALE ROAD, OGDEN, UTAH. lf ((3). TOBEX HAS GONE TO THE WVMMN& HOLE. AFTER. itolo ?lT.(Y-TA- Him hot to do U AHO'fcWE. OD PADDUNG rn NewsDacer Union.) ' i CONSULT COUNTY CLERK OR THE RESPECTIVE SIGNERS TOR FURTHER INFORMATION. Most Logan men believe in a between some The difference people's singing and having a fit is they cant help having fits. NOTICE TO CREDITORS OF IN THE DISTRICT COURT THE FIRST JUDICIAL DIS01 TRICT OF THE STATE UTAH, IN AND FOR Till COUNTY OF CACHE. In th Matter of the Estate c Anr.a Mortensen, Decoasod. Creditors will present claims wis vouchers to the undersigned administratrix at her residence, 141 W. 4th North, Logan Utah, on or before the Cist day of July, 1926. Date of first publication, May 25, 2926. Catharine M. Larsen, Administratrix. L. TOM PERRY, Attorney for Administratrix. NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF, THE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF UTAH, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CACHE. In the Matter of the Estate of Magnus Larsen, Jr., Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned adin ministratrix at her residence Mendon, Utah on or before the 31st day of July, 1926. Date of first publication, May 25, 1926. - Sarah Jane Larsen, Administratrix. L. TOM PERRY, Attorney for Administratrix. NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF. THE FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF UTAH, IN AND FOE THE COUNTY OF CACHE. In the Matter of the Estate of Kyrum B. Holt, deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at Fielding, Box Elder County, Utah, on or before the 20th day of July, 1926. EARL J. IlOLT, Administrator. Dated June 19th, 1926. NOTICE Notice is hereby given that a certain partnership, heretofore consisting of Ralph It. Channell and J. A. Wahlen, which has been The Cache publishing Valley Herald, is hereby disolved, and in is stead a new partnership formed to carry on said publishing business to be known as Leslie T. Foy and J. A. Wahlen. The new partnership hereby asconsumes existing obligations tracted by and for the old partnership, which had to do with the publishing of the Cache Valley Herald, and will receive all un- paid accounts due this newspaper. Dated this 2nd day of July, A brute is a man who brings 1926. company home for dinner without (Signed) wife know. his first letting RALPH R. CHANNELL LESLIE T. FOY Our advice to Logan boys is to A. WAHLEN J. look and see that theyve got unto back enough gas home, get less the young lady is unusually HELP WANTED 1 , 1 I pretty. Classified Ads are also indispensi- - lemon-colore- WANTED IMMEDIATELY. j trial by jury until it comes time for them to serve on a jury. -- SMITHFIELD In contrast to the complicated court procedure of modern communities, administration of justice on ihe frontier of the Middle West was refreshingly simple and direct. Court was ofien held In a settler's log cahlu or the bar room of a ta era and there was little formality about it. For instance, the sheriff v ho culled to order the court presided over by Judge John Reynolds, a pioneer of Illinois, did not use the customary 0ez! Oyezl formula. Instead he rapped sharply on the side of the cabin and reCome ntal ked in a casual tone: on in, boys. Our Jolm is going to hold court now. Frequently these pioneer Judges knew little more of the law than the jurors, who were usually aware of Jliut fact. Upon one occasion, after the jury had received its instructions and retired, the foreman returned and repented a deadlock. When asked the trouble, he replied : Why, Jedge, this ere Is the The boys want to know whether that ar you told em was ralv the law or jest your own notion. Upon being informed that It was raly the law" he returned to the jury room and a verdict was soon reached. Another judge, who had the disagreeable duty of sentencing a man named Green to be hanged, called the man before him and said Now, Mr. Green, I want you and all of your friends down on Indian creek to know that its not me who condemns you, but the Jury and the law. The law allows you time for preparation and the court wants to know what day you would like to be hanged. When Mr. Green seemed a bit shy about naming a date that would be convenient, His Honor said severely : Mr. Green, It Is a very serious matter to be hanged. It can't happen to a man more than once In his life and yon had better take all the time you can. The court will give you until this day four weeks. Mr. Clerk, look at the almanac and see If that comes on Sunday. Assured that It did not, the Judge then Informed Mr. Green that this day four weeks would witness his taking-off- . But the prosecuting attorney here interrupted with the suggestion that a formal sentence should lie pronounced in which the case was reviewed, a sense of guilt impressed upon the criminal and repentance urged upon him. Oh, Mr. Turney. exclaimed the iudge, Mr. Green understands Hint be is going to be hanged this dav four weeks as wed ns if I had preached to him a month. You understand it that way, dont you. Mt Mr. Green said he Green? did. whereupon the judge ordered him back to jail and court was dilfl-(tilt- one-fourt- h P Newspaper Union.) FRONTIER COURTS AND FRON. TIER JUSTICE lf (fik Western GUARDIAN-SHIAND NOTICES PROBATE ble as a business directory, i. Lost and Found, and everything in gen. -. oral. 1 ft t We Do you need help. A little want dont know who will get the ad under this title will get results taxes. for And wo cutting dont .know who will get the cash. before you can say skat. , These are the days the ciiy man WANTED buries a quart of onion sets and Highest cash prices paid for beef, considers himself a farmer. veal, hogs and chickens. Ira Hill-yar- d, TELL IT ALL! Smithfield, Utah. tf We heard the other day of a LoADVERTISEMENT gan woman who calls her little boy She says its so Prescription. Lighten your work use Sunray hard to get him filled. Lamps. ' |