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Show THE LEW SUN. LEHI, UTAH 7ke KITCHEN CABINET l. 130, Western Newspaper Union.) 1 do not ask for tweeter music than The common dally symphony of Man, Could I but grasp its counter point and see ' How each discord melts toward harmony. Dr. Frank Crane. TASTY LITTLE SARDINE The little silvery herring which we call sardine comes from the coast of Maine.' We do not serve this delightful little fish often enough to learn of . the number of dishes which it may add to our list of good things. How about a rarebit? Everybody Every-body likes rarebit Sardine Rarebit Mix two table-spoonfuls table-spoonfuls of melted butter with half a pound of rich cheese grated or broken into bits. Stir constantly while It melts, then add one egg beaten and diluted with two-thirds of a cupful of cream. Stir until smooth, season with paprika, a small pinch of salt and a few drops of tabasco sauce. Drain a box of sardines, broil them on slices of toast and pour over the hot rarebit Serve at once. One may buy the sardines put up In oil, or In tomato sauce, or "done" in mustard, so all tastes may be served and given a variety. Curried Sardines. Mix one tea-spoonful tea-spoonful each of sugar and curry powder, pow-der, adding a pinch of salt Put these into a saucepan with one cupful of cream and a teaspoonful of lemon Juice. Stir until hot, then drop In a dozen sardines. In another pan heat some butter, and In it saute slices of bread large enough to hold a sardine and a slice of apple. Pour some of the hot apple sauce over each and serve. Sardine sandwiches are probably the most popular way of serving this little 'fish, next to serving them as they come from the tin, with a bit of lemon and bread and ' butter. How would you like to try: Sardines on Toast This is a most . delightful dish for Sunday night supper sup-per or In fact for any day in the week. Put two tablespoonfuls of but ter in a saucepan, add two tablespoon fuls of flour, stir until smooth-and browned slightly, then add a half cupful cup-ful of good soup stock ; stir until thick, add a cupful of sardines from which the skin and bones have been removed and serve over rounds of hot buttered toast , SEASONABLE GOOD THINGS The season Is here when porch and garden parties call for all the lngenu lty and originality . i which each hos- Xr te3' possesses, to 3t! i. i make the occasion I tT2:l7. A teaspoonful of i-.W fresh grated 0T fstrri 'ange or lemon rind added to the pot of tea will add a flavor which reminds one of the rare and expensive blends. Loaf sugar rubbed over the rind of a lemon or orange will absorb much of the essential oil and thus when dropped into the hot tea adds a pleas ant flavor. Bub the surface of the lemon or orange with a coarse grater at first to break the oil cells, then use the sugar quickly. Icebox cookies are always in sea son, but especially so during the warm . weather. Try making them and keep ing them In the Icebox for a week or more, baking a baking sheet of them occasionally, then they will always be crisp and fresh to the taste. Lemon Icebox Cookies. Cream one cupful of butter or a mixture of but ter and other sweet fat Add one and one-half cupfuls of sugar, when well blended add three beaten eggs, two tablespoonfuls of lemon Juice, one teaspoonful tea-spoonful of the grated rind, five cupfuls cup-fuls of flour, one-half teaspoonful of salt four teaspoonfuls of baking powder, pow-der, all well blended in the flour. Add candied orange peel, chopped nuts; raisins may be added to taste. Shape into rolls and place In the Ice box. Cut Into thin slices and bake In a Quick oven. Graham Fruit Bars. Mix one-half teaspoonful of salt one cupful each of white and graham flour, two tea-spoonfuls tea-spoonfuls of baking powder, three-eighths three-eighths cupful of cold water, one-half cupful of shortening, one teaspoonful of lemon juice; more water may be seeded to make a stiff dough. Add the following: One-half cupful each of chopped pitted dates, figs, raisins, walnuts, and one-fourth of a cupful of sugar, the grated rind and juice of a large orange; there should be one-fourth one-fourth of a cupful of the fruit Juice. Roll out and fit to the bottom of large baking pans. Make a filling of the nuts, raisins and fruit Juice with sugar; mix well and spread one-fourth one-fourth of an inch thick over the sheet of dongb; cover with another layer. Bake 20 minutes In a hot oven. Cut Into bars and cooL Fruit Nectar. Mix one quart of water and two cupfuls of sugar, boll ten minutes. Cool, add two cupfuls of grape fruit cut into bits, the Juice of four lemons and four oranges. Freeze to a tausb, add the stiffly beaten white of one egg and one cupful of cherry pulp, continue freezing, then serve ' from punch bowl or as sherbet CHURCH TO BE NATIONAL SHRINE ""lit 4ft. : i I . . View showing old St Paul's, in Mount Vernon, and a corner of the graveyard. grave-yard. This structure was once used as headquarters by General Washington, A plan is afoot to restore it because of its associations with the country's early life. Plan to Restore Old St. Pauls c in Mt. Vernon Announcement that St. Paul's East- Chester Episcopal church in Mount Vernon would be made Into a national historic and religious shrine recalls that the original church of that name was built before 1GG3. It is the plan of the rector, Rev. W. Harold Welgle, resident chaplain of the Episcopal Actors' guild, and his vestry, to restore the present church, which is one hundred sixty-seven years old, to establish a museum, and to bufld an outdoor sanctuary in one corner of the graveyard. A drive for $300,000 with which to make the trans formation Is being started by the parish,'. St Paul's Eastchester is older by a few years than St Paul's chapel, Broadway and Fulton street which was built by the British and later became be-came part of the Trinity parish of the Protestant Episcopal church. The parish par-ish of St Paul's Eastchester goes much further back, and is one of the oldest in America. " 1 Hospital In Revolution. Services have been held there for 265 years with only one break. That was when the building was commandeered command-eered as a hospital in the Revolutionary Revolution-ary war. The church stands near the intersection of South Columbus avenue and South Third avenue. Mount Vernon, Ver-non, accessible by way of the Boston Post road or the Klngsbridge Road station of the New York, Westchester and Boston railroad. It was a center of worship before there was a good road to Boston. It has a churchyard with gravestones dating back 226 years, or 72 years before be-fore our government was founded. Aaron Burr practiced law there when the church was used as a courthouse. The names of many families linked to the early development of our country were on the rolls of the old Eastchester Eastches-ter church. . " Ground Fought Over. Located In the very path of the Revolutionary Rev-olutionary struggle, old St Paul's was in the area traversed In going to Connecticut Con-necticut and New England, just eighteen eight-een miles north of the settlement of New York. The strip between Long Island sound and the Hudson was the famous '"neutral ground" of American Ameri-can history, because it was not for long in the hands either of the British Brit-ish or the Colonials. The present stone edifice, stands on the very spot occupied by the first meeting bouse, and is the third build ing which has served the parish surrounding sur-rounding Eastchester green. It appears ap-pears to have started near an Indian In-dian path, which subsequently became Klngsbridge road. It was called "Hutchinson's" in the early days, after aft-er Anne Hutchinson. It retained this title until 16C6. when by royal charter it was enacted that . . the plantation shall continue and retain ye name of Eastchester. East-chester. . . The name was taken from that of Chester, England. LET HER GO! is:: Mil This youngster evidently doesn't bold with "safe and sane Fourth. ' .Vi. 4; Courage Shown by Hamilton on Monmouth Field What lover of American freedom can read of the part played by Colonel Hamilton without a sense of pride and emotion? A mere boy Just the age of Lafayette commanding an artillery ar-tillery company at nineteen; lieutenant lieuten-ant colonel on the staff of Washington, Washing-ton, and at Yorktown In 1781, In the presence of three armies. leading the assault on the redoubt on the night of October 14, with a brilliancy of courage cour-age and success that could not be surpassed. sur-passed. Indeed, a monument built as big as the Treasury building itself would not be too large for Alexander Hamilton. For his great encouragement to the commander in chief to whom he even served for a while as confidential sec retary all Americans, owe a debt of gratitude. Nor will history ever fail to record the loyalty to his chief. nctably displayed at the battle of Monmouth, during a temporary . reverse re-verse brought on by the retreaf of 5.000 picked officers and men under command of MaJ. Gen. Charles Lee, George Washington Parke Custis, grandson of- Mrs. Washington and adopted son of the first President, gives an Interesting account of this episode. He tells us: MAs the commander In chief, accompanied accom-panied by a numerous suite, ap proached the vicinity of Monmouth Courthouse, he was met by a little lifer boy, who archly observed, They are all coming this way, your honor.' 'Who are coming, my little man?' asked General Knox. 'Why, our boys, your honor, our boys, and the British are right after them,' replied the lit tie musician. 'Impossible!' exclaimed Washington. And giving a spur to his charger, he proceeded at full gallop to an eminence a short distance ahead. There, to his extreme pain and mortification, it was discovered that the boy's Intelligence was but too true. ' i "The very elite of the American army, 5,000 picked officers and men. were In full retreat, closely pursued by the enemy. The first inquiry of the chief was for Major General Lee, who commanded the advance, and who soon appeared, when a warm cou versatlon ensued that ended by the major general being ordered to the rear. "During this Interview an Incident of rare and chivalric interest occurred, Lieutenant Colonel Hamilton, aide to the general In chief, leaped from his horse, and drawing bis sword, addressed ad-dressed the general with. 'We are betrayed be-trayed ; your excellency, and this army Is betrayed, and the moment has arrived ar-rived when every true friend of Amer ica and her cause must be ready to die in their defense. "Washington, charmed with the geu erous enthusiasm of his favorite aide. yet deeming the same ill-timed, point ing to the colonel's horse that was , cropping the herbage, nnconscious of the great scene enacting around him. calmly observed. 'Colonel Hamilton, you will take your horse.' "The general In chief now set him' self in earnest about restoring the fortunes of the day." It was here that Sergeant Molly (Molly Pitcher) made her name fa mous by performing the duties of an expert artilleryman. John Clagett Proctor, In the Washington Star. Famous Yorktown The battle of Yorktown took plnce on October C 17SL The place was defended de-fended by a British array under Lord Cornwall! and was beseipred by the allied forces of French and Americans under General Washin.'rton and Count de Rochamheau. On the 19th of Goto!. Go-to!. or Cornwallis surrendered There were 55"i0 men in the British array, and In the allied forces there were 9.000 Americans and 7,000 Frenchmen. The losses were: British 552 killed and wounded and American and French 300 killed aaj wounded. Daddy dEveiiig Fairy Tale yvnARY graham bower rr vr.Tiw mwrnt whom. - THE PIGS "I didn't mean," said Porky Pig, "that I was a great-grandfather of the pigs when I said just now that I was a great grandfather. "I didn't mean a regular great grandfather." - "Oh, you're as clear as mud," said Pinky Pork. "Well, from the way you like mud. then," said Porky, "you must have at least a liking for my speech." "Oh, I don't know about that" said Pinky squealing, and twisting his tail into a funny little knot "I meant" continued Porky, "that I was a very great grandfather. Great like fine noble people, great like masterful mas-terful pigs, great like discoverers, great Great" And the last "great" ne squealed with all his strength. "Ah, then you mean you're a great pig." said Miss Ham, "you dont mean that you've grown into a great-grand father by having great-gran dchlldrenr "Aren't we great-grandchildren?" asked Pinky Pig. "No indeed," said Porky. "You're not my great-grandchildren, neither are you great In any way at alL "Ah, and I suppose you're not of "You're Older," Said Pinky Pifl. the pig family, eh?" asked Brother Bacon Ba-con turning up his snout, for he had been snubbed most horribly and he was still feeling a little bit ashamed of himself and wanted to appear very bright In the eyes of all the pigs gathered gath-ered there in the barnyard. "Of course I'm of the pig family, but I'm an honorable pig. Fm Grandfather Grand-father Porky Pig. Yes, I am." "Well, none of us ever tried to tell yon that you weren't" SUd Brother Bacon. "But and that means so much but" continued Porky Pig, "there is a difference between me and all the rest of you." "You're older," said Pinky Pig, grunting rudely. 1 "That may make me wiser," said Porky Pig, treating Pinky's speech as a compliment which was not at all the way It was intended to sound, "but that is not what I mean." "Tell us." urged Miss Ham. "They value pork more than they used to. They think it is good food now a lot of them do. "Oh yes, they think more of It than ever. , "But oh, dear squealing, grunting pigs, how fine it is for you, that you have a great, a very, very, very great grandfather. "That certainly is lucky for all of you." And the pigs squealed and grunted and seemed to think it was a very good thing that they had a sense of humor. Porky took himself quite seriously. He really, really did. Grunt grunt squeal, squeaL CONUNDRUMS What Insect does make? A firefly. blacksmith Which letters are the hardest work ers? The B's (bees). Why is a steel trap like smallpox? Because It Is catching. What Is taken from you before you get it? Your photograph. What can you find twice In every corner, but once In every room? The letter "r." Why is a tennis player like a fisherman? fisher-man? Because both are concerned with the net . From what word of six letters can you take away one and yet have twelve? Dozens dozen. Why Is a false friend like the let ter P? Because he is always first in pity and always last In help. If a woman was to change her sex. how would it affect her religion? Shfc would be a he thea (Heathen). Why Is a heavy thunderstorm lite a lar;;e Spanish onion? Because it is peal upon peal (peel upon peel). When conld the British empire have been bought most cheaply? When Richard HI offered hii kingdom for a horse. How Is It that trees can put on new dresses without "openins th-ir trunks"? Because they leave out their summer clothing. Modern Youth Had Eye to the Possible Future "Christians take betrothals and marriages too lightly," said Rabbi Magnin. "They dart in and out of matrimony with as little concern as they pass through the revolving doors of their apartment bouses. Mating Mat-ing has become a game, rather than a sacred obligation, "Not very long ago a Jewelry firm called me up and said that a young man, a Christian, by the way, bad given my name as a reference in or-der or-der to get an engagement ring on the Installment plan. Later, when I saw the young fellow, I asked : "Why in the world do you want to buy an engagement ring on the Installment In-stallment plan when I know you can afford to pay cash for It? " 'Because,' he replied, 'it relieves me of some of the responsibility for getting It back if the engagement is broken.' "Los Angeles' Jrimes. - 'C Ultra' ' Before his rise as a real esfate man, Frank Meline was a well-known architect and has done as much as any other one man to shape the style of southern California dwellings. dwell-ings. A Not tery long ago a close friend said: "Frank 1 want a really modern apartment; the very last word in progress ; something of . the future rather than of today." , "That's easy," laughed Mr. Meline. "All you are asking for is a garage, a putting green and a bedroom." Los Angeles Times. Substantial Incremt When Albert Hershenbine came out of a Chicago restaurant he found a big police dog in possession of his taxlcab. "Get out," said Hershenbine, Her-shenbine, "Grrr, grrr," returned the dog. Heshenbine repeated his command com-mand with the same lack of success and went back into the restaurant to get a piece of meat for a bribe. When he returned he was able to come close enoigb to see that he had not one dog in the back seat of his . car, but one dog and eight puppies. Whale's Diving Power It would be Impossible for a whale to descend to the bottom of the ocean at any considerable depth of water. Although it cannot be exactly known, it has been estimated that the maximum dive of the whale Is approximately 100 fathoms that Is 600 feet and at any greater depth than this the pressure of the water would be too great for the safety of the whale. Thoughtful Mike Why are ye wearin' a.black eye, Hinnessy? Pat Sure, it's mournin' for the man that gave it to me. Answers. Take NATURE'S REMEDY Nl tonight You'll be "fit and fine" by morning tongue clear, headache gone. appetite back, bowels acting pleasantly, bilious attack forgotten. For constipation; too, Better than any mere laxative. At druggist only 25c Make the test tonight FEEL LIKE A MILLION. TAKE ,. , OtherwUe An old negro was receiving a lecture lec-ture from a Judge. . "Now, I don't expect to see you here again," ended the man of law. "Wliy, Mr. Judge," queried the negro, "you's not a-goin' to resign, are you, sah?" Parrot disease has not yet diminished dimin-ished the flow of useless talk in the land. UOUS? Ill Keep Insects AwayOutdoors! Flit 'contains a special insect repellant. clcan smelling. 4 lie . Zest - Enjoy the charm of a Healthy Skm mm z5 OINTMENT AXTISEPTIG CLEANSING ANTISEPTIG SOOTHINC 8oapwOhtitt5fcsi0s.rerii:MtOi " ' 1 11 1 unr? Ttursda Ml FOR CONSTIPATimT effective in smaller das sAFE SCIENTIFIC Farm Engineering Gaini For 15 years the federal gove ment has been teaching agricultnn engineering to the farmers of country. J those 115 years the J has increased 1,500 per cent I least the expenditure has gone I about that amount. The work of the extension Ig voted to problems of farm supply, soil erosion, farm machine andf other similar matters. Its J is now carried on In 25 states. HANFCRD'S Balsam of Hyrrh Konr bMktorSntbotttalf Botmlted. AUdMht EST MED EOINE Old I i More all tho SHE 10WS Of widows Says 'Take Lydia E. Pink. We ham's Vegetable Compound" imxi repres , "panogo Pfc. Meyers, Fla. "Lydia E. M. of Di, barn's Vegetable Compound is thebe f ..J....I .. medicine I ever ucuai heard of. Befwt last W mybabywasbom Canyoi I wasalwavsweak .i , and rundown. I ? - 1 . ' had nervou8speIl8 the dis i untillcouldn tdo oorted my housework. A intern lady told me about the Vegetable P0101 Compound and it genera strengthened me, acquai iBesido my emu T hi housework I am T Lu now working in a restaurant and I feel organ! better than I have in three years. I hope on thi my letter will be the means of leading tnrr., some other woman to better health."- riauuu' Mrs. Bertha Rivejss, 2914 Polk St, pni " Ft Meyers, Florida. 1 f At i IMPROVED STOCK RANCH cuts two hm ??a E dred tons of hay. Excellent rang. J, W anndw GUTZLKR. RADIUM, COLO. salad, viirM vai m rwtrwt nr T WHH J VV 11 OUrtl c8 CI AND BUILD IT VOURSELF 8AV- . INO OF THE UtU AL -tOSf fc MOt The boat you've always wanted can 1st , i be yours at V4 the regular cost. Thousudi IB. t have successfully built their own CrilS using our knock-down, ready cut semi-u-gr&m sembled materials. Complete simple u1,ii sembllng instructions understood by am."' one. 66 designs. Outboard Motor SpeedMen Runabouts, Cruisers. Sail, Row and Hunt-?""'-'' ins;. Send 10c (or catalog. Brooks Boat Co,iArtfl Inc., Box 101. Saginaw West Side, Mitk.1 i praye Business Wanted. Would like to hear from party with business or investment (or saliVOCai Confidential handling. W. 11. Fuller Busi-,, neas Service. Wichita. Kansas. Fraj! Stoke PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM UiTely Begum Dandruff-Stops Hair if aUtad1 Scow Imparts Color and I Beauty to Gray and Faded Hani Lehl ' State Hheox Ctem. Wk..Patehogut.N,T, FLORESTON SHAMPOO Ideal for use ii p eonnectionwith Parker'eHair Balaam. Makestht jjjaii hair soft and fluffy. 60 cents by mail or at drug. Kiata. HiscoiCbemicalWorka.Patcbotrne.N.X. Able; I V W.N.U,Salt Lake City, No. 26-193a1 j talltl No Reason for Fear Black I wonder why a dog Pu&0f g, such an implicit trust In a man? r White Well, you never heard of i gpog man trying to borrow money oft i" dog or selling him a used car.-Stray car.-Stray Stories. The great writer does not reallj' come to conclusions about life; lit discerns a quality in it Flit is sold only in this yellow can with the black band. World's lpct Ye1, aw O 1930 Btaaeo Io use rfdrjsA 2 i i |