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Show Pare Two THE VOICE OF SHARON December, 1936 RECIPES rolls. Refrigerator Mrs. June Shaw. yeast cake (FleichmTns) )4 cup luke warm water. cup shortening (Crisco) . 54 cup sugar. 1 tps. salt 1 cup mashed potatoes 1 cup scalded milk 2 eggs 6 to 8 cups of flour. Mash potatoes; add shortening, sugar, salt and eggs and cream together. Dissolve yeast in luke warm water, add to luke warm mdk, and mix with potato mixture. dd sifted flour enough to make stiff dough. Pour on floured board and knead well. Put in large bowl and let rise to double bulk, then knead slightly, rub over top with melted butter and place in casserole and cover tightly and place in refrigerator until ready to bake. If you wish, the dough can be prepared up to this stage the day before you wish the roles and left in the refrigerator until about an hour before you get ready to bake them. About an hour before baking time, take the dough from the casserole and form into rolls Let rise and then bake for 15 to 20 minutes in hot oven, about 400 degrees. This will make between three and four dozen rolls. 1 WHEN THEY WONT EAT (From Parents Magazine, Nov. 36)trfoods) and we are plenteously .child to eat and do it Getiing in the proper way, is almost entirely a matter of habit and training. A little intelligent handling can make and remake your childs eating likes and dislikes. The best way to make a POOR eater of a child is to coax or force him to that method can do actual harm. It is important that the mothers attitude at meal time be one of apparent indifference as to whether or not the child takes food. After a reasonable period is allowed for the meal, the plates and cups should be removed and the childs hunger allowed to teach him to eat while there is a chance. A natrally big eater can be turned into a small one, and vice versa, by parental emphasis on food. Training must start while the child is still on an exclusive milk diet. Suppose you are trying to get him to begin eating cereal and and he fights away vegetables from the unaccustomed foods. True, it is important for him to take these new dishes but any particular bite is not so important (hat you will need to plop spoonfuls into his mouth when he opens it to cry his protests, nor to otherwise force it upon him or coax him. The hunger method is really FRUIT COOKIES much kinder than letting the childs Mrs. Lera Gammon )4 cup lard creamed with 1 cup ignorant whims get the upper hand of his health and happiness, sugar. Add 1 cup sour cream (quite rich) and affect his character as well. in which has been mixed 1 level There are three causes of poor teaspoon of soda in a little boil- eating in children. The first is actual infection or sickness. In such ing water. be Add either 1 cup currants or 1 cup a situation it will probably raisins. If raisins are used, run necessary to coax the child to take them through a fine food chop- the nourishment it must have. But dont let that method continue. per. The second cause of poor appeAdd flour sifted with teaspoon tite is very rare in this country beof nutbeg and a little sailt. Drop on cookie tin being careful cause it is caused by lack of vitanot to get the cakies too thin, min B, (milk, vegetables and such less they make too crisp cakes. Bake in a hot oven for ten to cup milk 10 minutes. Bring sugar fifteen minutes. This will make and 1 cup milk to boiling point, add about 40 goodsized little cakes. melted chocolate and gelatine. Boil 15 minutes, remove from fire, stir FRUIT CAKE until it thickens, add flavoring and Cordelia Booth nuts. Cut when cold. 1 pkg. seedlessraisins, boil with 4 cups water for 20 minutes, cool, DIVINITY add )4 lb. butter, 5 eggs beaten, Eva Gillespie then add 1 cup sugar, 1 tsp, soda, 3 cups sugar, 3 tbp. Karo Corn 1 tsp. cinnamon, 1 tsp, nutmeg, )4 tsp. cloves, 4 cups flour, 1 enp Syrup, A cup water. Boil untl it nuts and citron prfel, bake in slow forms a soft ball in cold water then pour half of mixture slowly oven 1 hour. Icing. 1 tbp. butter, 1 egg beaten, over the stiffly beaten whites of three eggs. Place the balance of pulverized sugar and vanilla. the syrup back on stove and boil until it forms a hard brittle thread A NEW SERVING DISH. Serve fruit cocktail or a s .lad in in cold water. Keep stirring the a cup made of bright red apple. egg mixture while the other syrup hoil and then add the syrup slowly to the egg mixture and beat unPUMPKIN PIE til it will stand up in a mound. LaVern Jones. 1 egg, Va cup sugar, 1 tbp. flour, Then add flavoring and nuts or if you wish and drop Vi tsp. salt, y2 tsp. cinnamon, 'A cocoanut asp. each of nutmeg and ginger, from a teaspoon on to platter. Do not stir the syrup while it is cook1)4 cups steamed or baked pumpkin, 2 tbp. molasses, 1 pint milk, ing after it starts to boil. (Omit molasses if you wish). Beat CORN FLAKE KISSES eggs thoroughly, add sugar mixed with flour, salt and spices. Add Flora Bigler pumpkin, molasses, milk - stir un2 cups corn flakes, 1 cup sugar, til Well blended and bake. Makes 2 egg whites, 1 cup cocoanut, xi one nine inch pie. cup nuts, 1 esp. vanilla. Beat eggs whites until stiff and dry, gradualMARSHMALLOW FUDGE ly add sugar and beat for two Flora Bigler minutes, then add other ingredi2 envelopes Knox Sparkling Gel- ents, stirring only enough to mix atine, 1 3 cup milk, 1V4 squares thoroughly. Drop by teaspoonfuls chocilate, 2xt cups sugar, 1 cup on oiled paper, and bake in a very chopped nuts (walnuts or pecans), moderate oven. Makes about 30 1 tsp. vanilla. Soak gelatine in 3 kisses. a 2-- 3 cA Very cfflerry Christmas Life is that we might have joy and wise is the person who takes every opportunity to add to his happiness. The Christmas Season is especially dedicated to it with tire reminder that the deepest and best joy comes to those filled w ith the Christ Spirit. Christ taught that we are not to spend lives burdened with worries and oppressing duties of little real benefit. He taught the way to. a life of happiness and said it was to be found in the life of faith, of love for and association with your His first fellow men and a development of your talents. recorded miracle was a turning of water into wine so that a marriage, celebration might be made more joyful. While his chroniclers and those who painted pictures of what they imagined he. looked like, pictured him as a serious man with no suggestion of a smile, not to mention a laugh, I am sure he must have smiled and laughed often. lie had learned the way to happiness and was a constant doer of the acts that bring joy. Men of medicine and of psychology are agreed that health of mind and body depend upon the attitude of mind.. They say we need occasionally to give way completely to the spirit A of mirth and merry making if we wish to keep normal. great university in the U. S. believes this so fully that it has placed hi its curriculum a class designee to teach students to see the humorous side of life. Mr. Bernard McFadden says that the tenseness and poisons built up in the body by melanun-choly 'must find a release else the body or mind will break is release the and abandonment to merriment the strain needed. There are even cases he says, when getting a victim of melancholia thoroughly drunk has been helpful because it burdens and released him made him forget the to a period of joyfulness. Of course, this choice between two evils may be justified in some such case, but the wise person will of his own free and unstimulated will urge himself on to and find himself as much rational merrymaking as he can made younger and healthier in body and in mind as a result. So why not dedicate this season especially, to a rational, and then, with due respect harmless, time of merrymaking occasions the to that require seriousness and tears, retain it forever after. er over-poweri- 2-- 2-- THE CHRISTMAS SPIRIT By Karl Banks And whatsoever ye would that man should do unto you, lo ye even so unto them. When Jesus of Nazareth spoke these words, no one living at the time regarded them at all seriously. Why should they? Wasnt Jesus the son of a poor tradesman? Great words were poken by persons of power, wealth, and authority. Who was this carpenters son that people should pay him any heed? Wasnt this creed in direct opposition to the law of the Hebrews that prescribed an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth? Certainly this code of behavior was as weak as the man who advised it. And so the comment ran, none realizing that with the utterance of these words, there became implanted within human hearts a new philosophy of life, which philosophy alone can save humanity from certain doom. And so nineteen hundred and thirty-si- x years later, Christmas conies again to a Christian world. Why do we give gifts? Why do we express best wishes? Why do we spread peace and good cheer on every side? The true Christmas spirit is the spirit 'of love, of giving, of good will of doing to others as we should like to be done by. Christmas is the one great Christian holiuay the one great opportunity for the expression of the better traits of our personalities. Jesus of Nazareth still lives. He lives in the ouls of Treat scientists who are fighting for foes of mankind pain, (discomfort, and disease. He lives in the hearts of great teachers and ministers, who point the way to a better plan of life. He lives in the souls of mothers who go down into the shadow I n order to give life and happiness to their loved ones. He lives I11 the hearts of any and all who by soft word or kindly deed, 'ring peace and joy into the lives of others. And thus, the Christmas spirit lives on, growing fuller, icher, and stronger from year to year. May it enter our own iearts and direct the actions of our own lives, not on this day I, lone, but throughout the years to come. It is not what we lave, but what we do with what we have thaf. makes our lives worthwhile. Noverty, greed, hate, and the terrors of war can e eliminated from the world only when men are willing to ve as well as profess the admonition of Jesus of Nazareth; 8 r "He that findeth his life shall lose it, and he that loseth his a He for my sake shall find it. - 1 The third and by far the most common cause of poor appetites is faulty conditions for tatmg. These include coaxing, forcing, and all such would-b- e stimuli as telling the child a story while he eats, making a game of the meal, or surrounding him with a similar temporary incentive. Meal time is one of the few opportunities a child has to exercise his power over adults bv doing what he wishes and he will readily take advantage of the opportunity. When we show no reaction whatever at a refusal of food, this incentive of the child to exercise power or to get attention is removed. One of the main factors in providing the proper conditions for eating is hunger. Such being 'he case, it is folly to offer the child wholesome and appetizing food between mealtimes. The child may make a face and spit out a food merely because he has not become familiar with its taste and feel. This attitude can set into, active dislike unless the new food is offered in small quantities and without emphasis until it is thoroughly familiar.. Foods which the child has once learned to like will rot become distasteful to him unless he is given too much of them. If you have been given too much of them, leave them off the menu for a while. It is hard for a mother to control herself in this method of child training, but the parent with the will power for the best interest of the child can do it. To maintain an attitude of indifference and let the child go without one day, and then give in the next, loses more ground than if no effort had been made. This may be the way your case will work; After a bite or two of supper, Johnny turns his head pointedly away from the spoon, upon which you set it down without evidence of reaction. You may provide yourself with a magazine in order not to be tempted into one or another of the various ways of frying to get a child to eat. In a moment offer another bite and when it is refused, read some more. After a little of this Johnny will probably start whimpering, but no matter what he does you maintain complete indifference. Toward the end of the half hour period allowed for the meal (which is a reasonable time) Johnny may be hesitatingly taking a few bites. But when the time is up, quit offering bites the meal is over. See that he has a big drink cf water when he is undressed for bed. At breakfast the next morning it may be much the same thing but lunch will find him beginning to hold out for bis milk again. And so it may continue by spells for a month or a little more, but if he is always met with the same treatment it wont last forever. A baby specialist says that it will not hurt the child to go hungry because nature will persuade them to eat when they are hungry enough. In the long run, of course, their health will be greatly aided. CLAYTON LORENZO ELDER. 68 died Tuesday, November 8th, of a throat infection. He come from Washington County, Utah, in 18(7. He married Elniina Stoker of Junction, Utah, and the couple moved to Orem several years ago. Suiviving are his wife, four sons, one granddaughter and twenty six grand children. His funeral services were well conducted and largely attended. HOMER ANDREW 1st of uremic poisoning. He was born in Provo and had lived there and in Grand View all his life. He married Mary Ellen Skinner February 10, 1885 8 8 in the Manti temple. Surviving are four children, 21 grandchildren, six one brother great grandchildren, and three sisters. servic-- s Funeral held were Thursday in the Grand View ward. THEODORE Christmas Cheer Starts NOW with a new Hart Schaffner & Marx cr SUIT H. SALISBURY well known and farmer fruit grower of Sharon ward, died as the result of a stroke of apoplexy suffered as he was driving to Provo. His wife, Josephine Snow Salisbury, his mother, four children, two brothers and one sister survive him. Mr. Salisbury was an active church worker. He fulfilled a two year mission in the Eastern States, was Sharon Ward Clerk for six years and secretary of the Sharon Stake High rPiests quorum. $30 now when youre going and places things. They give you C. MILLER. The munity was saddened by Jhe death of Mr. Miller whose funeral was in held Sunday afternoon the Bonneville chapel. He had lived in Pleasant View only a month, but had many friends heer and in business and social con- tacts; put added zest into life. must They he good clothes, however. There is one sure way to Mans business is to work to endure surmount difficulties, to hardship, to solve problems, to overcome the inertia of his own nature, to turn choas into cosmos this is to by the aid of system are good. to get them know they That is here, where the Shriver live. and Patronize the advertisers that so generously patronize the Voice of Hart Schaffner Marx labels 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 correct in 1937 Ford Pickup 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 only $643 Complete, No Extras TELLURIDE MOTOR CO. Phone 1000 - 8 8 8 Provo, Utah and style SPECIAL 3 8 8 8 combine high in quality. 5 CHRIS i MAS? & to give you double assurance that they are Varsity Town and Under-GraSUITS AND OVERCOATS d $22.50 $25.00 at SHRIVERS Christmas Greetings We now carry a complete line of CEMENT CONCRETE PIPE For Culverts, Sewers, Drain Tile, Irri Water Lines tion and R R R R R R R R R Now is the time to Make Improvements r k Mil Mil- 1- S- - Lumber Co. S r . . . SELLS LOCAL PRODUCTS EMPLOYS LOCAL LABOR HE KEEPS WHAT PROFIT HE MAKES AT HOME! Where it Does Us All More Good! fle Phone R Beneficial to Y our Community Gasoline I R R R R R R R R Made possible by Utah People J. Corleissen, Inc. SOUTHERN UTAH g r ? F arm (top dripping on (tove. Round, easy clean corner. 3 qt. Sue, $1 M ( Reg. $1 .70). SEASONS GREETINGS TO ALL A Cbrntruas Present is Contained in these Prices! TODAY Assured Quality is Economical R R . miser Now imooth bottom. Fine sneth basket. Swinging rest Eeiy-dea- n dome cover. Modern, Bakelite handle. 6 cup, 31.95 (Reg. $1.50); 4 cup, $1X5 (Reg. $1.20). Alao 2 and 1 2 cup tier. Distributed By Provo, Utah jj 357 U.iSimStSilsmUU.iU.eittZi-UU.S'U.eU.34ti'!iZt4U.f.U.ti;.tSi- R R R R R I R R R R Mutual Coal & R H. for confidence new com- u 8 8 R IS A UTAH PRODUCT! doing n IIEBER - and up to $65 Get into new clothes Vteiy lisp? lY i) I $ 5 Golden E COAT 56, R R R R R Hi The supreme prayer of inv heart rich, famous, powerful or even good, but simply to be radiant. I desire to radiate calm courage health, I wish to live withand good-wil- l. out hate, jeaousy, envy, fear, I wish to be simple honest, frank natural, clean in mind and clean in to sav, I do body, unaffected not know, if it be so, and to meet all men on an absolute equality, to face any obstacle and r'eet every is not to be learned, difficulty unabashed and unafraid. I wish others to live their lives, too, up to their highest, fullest and be-- t. To that, end I pray that I never meddle, interfere, dicmay tate, give advice that ;s no( walked, or assist when my services are not needed. If I can help people, Ill do it by giving them a chance to help themselves; and if I can uplift or inspire, lot it be by example, rather inference and suggestion, than by injunction and dictation. That is to say, I desire to be rato Radiate Life! diant DAVIS, 68, died November Mental dissolution: that condition where you are perfectly satisfied with your religion, and government. . oil sup- - plied. LIFE RADIANT Obituaries T&lfiR BROS Lay Mash (Barley) Lay Mash (Corn) Oyster Shell Barley (Recleaned) Barley, (Ground) Calf Meal, 25 lbs eomVY (Gift Department ! lwirraAnjuaiiMaB -- 4 $1.97 $2.09 $ .90 $1.84 $1.93 $ .87 ' |