OCR Text |
Show PAGE THREE THE UTE SENTINEL Friday, November 12, 1987. The Duke of Windsor wants to live in Europe, Wally in America. So they probably will compromise by living in America. BEST CEMENT 'ALL-UTAH' The Last Word On IRoasting Turkey "That dirty so-and-so of a Glump has run off with my wife!" thundered the first husband. To which another bemoaned, "I'll say he was a • dirty so-and-so! I was counting on him to run off with mine!" Irate Father: "I can see right By the way, did you ever see a through that chorus girl's Intrigue, Jist of millionaires who lost their young man." Lovesick Son: "I lmow, dad, but lives in the World War? Nope, they all dress that way now." neither did we. It was back in 1918, and the captain was conducting a quizz. "Who were the three greatest soldiers in history ?" he asked one of the recruits. "I'm sorry, sir," said Mel Lind, "I didn't catch your name, but the other two were Napoleon and Grant." Fairy Tales of the American Legion: The Sergeant: "Now, gentlemen, as soon as you are ready, form in line please. I am going to ask you to do a little marching." The Mess Sergeant: "What will you have, sir?" Chicken ala King, tenderloin steak or beef roast?" The Looie: "I am digging a trench today, and I would appreciate it very much if some Of you would be good enough to help me." The Major: "You have not received your pay this month? My dear sir, this is an outrage! I will secure it for you at once, and in the meantime I insist that you accept this trifling hundred dollar loan from me." Then the bugle woke the buck private up. Farmer: "I want to buy a shotgun." Salesman: "Here's one that will last a lifetime." Farmer: "Heck! It won't take that long to marry off my daughter." Don't put off until tomorrow what you can do today, Dad Gummit advises. There probably will be a law against it by that time. Deflnltton: Measure of a man's character: What he would do if he knew he would never be found out. It may be all right to make marriage a career, says Dad Gummit, but don't look for any promotions. "When you and your wife have, an argument, who comes out ahf'.ad ?" "I do, but she's always right behind me with a broom." Besides putting salt on what you hear, how about putting a little sugar on what you say? It begins to look as If the Kaiser won the war, after all. He Is living the life of Riley in Holland while the rest of the world is In an awful me9S. There may be no war in China, but try to convince a soldier with a bullet in his leg that there isn't. They tell up in Seattle about the Republican New Dealer who had seven sons. The first was a lawyer, and the second couldn't be trusted either; the third was a banker, and the fourth was in the cell next to him; the fifth was a brigadier general, and the sixth never went to war either; and the seventh was a bachelor, just like ------ M. E. COMMUNITY CHUROH 44 East Center Street E. LEON BUCHANAN, Pastor ARMY NEEDS MEN FOR SERVICE IN HAWAII To fill existing vacancies, the Salt Lake City Recruiting District has been authorized to accept applications for enlistment in the infantry, coast artillery, field artillery, and air corps, with station in Hawaii it was announced today by Colonel B. E. Grey, District Rect'Uiting Officer. Young men between the ages of 18 and 35 years, single, without dependents, of good moral character, and who can meet physical requirements, will be accepted Colonel Grey said. Men accepted and enlisted will sail for Hawaii November 13th and December 7th. Fifteen men are needed to fill vacancies in the air corps, Moffet Field, California. Men experienced as radio operators, photographers, clerks, typists, machine gunners, or who have some knowledge of airplane mechanics, are required for these vacancies. A limited number of high school graduates are acceptable for such vacancies, even though without specialist training. Colonel Grey also stated that men were being accepted for the 38th Infantry, Fort Douglas, Utah, 4th Infantry, Fort Missoula, Montana; 4th Infantry, Fort George Wright, Washington, 7th Infantry, Vancouver Barracks, Washington, 30th Infantry, Presidio of San· Francisco, California, and for several other vacancies in the 9th Corps Area. Young men interested in any of the above vacancies are urged to call or write to any of the following recruiting offices: 223 Ness Building, Salt Lake City, 419 Federal Building, Boise, 17 Federal Building, Pocatello, and City Hall, Twin Falls, Idaho. Full information will be furnished anyone calling or writing regarding these vacancies. Wall Street is betting eight to one that President Roosevelt won't appoint any more supreme court They figure he has justices. stirred up so much trouble with just one appointment that he won't bother with the other five. Subscribe for the Sentinel NOW. "ONE hundred percent Utah" describes the portland cement industry in this state. All or the raw materials used, all the coal consumed and all the electrical energy employed In the manufacture of the cement are of Utah origin. About $4,500,000 is Invested in plants and equipment here and at capacity some 4100 barrels can be turned out daily. "Portland" is not a special brand of cement, but a. term as Inclusive as "Irish" applied to potatoes, or "sterling" to silver. The name designates a proc~ss rather than a The process involves variety. proper mixing, crushing, fine grinding and Intense heat. In the mix are limestone, marl, shale, clay, blast furnace slag and gypsum. One does not have to go abroad for any of them, nor for fuel or power. He does not even have to send outside for the powder with which to blast the rock. That, too, is made in Utah. Cement that would harden under water was made by the Romans and Carthaglnlans. The art was rediscovered in England in 1824 and developed in the United States in the '60s. Utah was the second state west of the Mississippi river to practice it, the first being California. In 1890 the Utah Portland Cement Co. built a plant In Salt Lake City which, for three years, made natural cement on a small scale and experimented with portland cement. LaGue & C11mpbell took the plant over in 1893 and Installed a kiln of the Danish ring oven type. Commercial production was not attained Ulltil in 1895 when Topham Richardson, an Englishman, financed a small dome kiln and actually made satisfactory portland cement. "Clinker", the hard globules resulting from . heating the raw cement mixture to incipient fusion, was burned, ground on a set or old-fashioned flour mill burrs and sold. In 1&92 the English Interests bought out LaGue & Campbell and built a new plant. They produced from 40 to 50 barrels a day or fair· ly good portland cement. In the spring of 1898 the plnnt or the Utah Portland Cement Co. was swept by tire. It was rebuilt by the English owners with a 40-foot kiln and electrical power. They found a market for about 100 barrels a day, extending from Great Falls on the north to San Francisco on the west and Denver on the east. The plant was completely remodeled . and brought to a capacity or 1000 barrels a day in 1!110. It was taken over by the present owners in 1915 and, in 1925-6, changed from a dry to a wet process plant. Now It has two kilns 185 feet long and a producing capaclt· or about 1500 barrels a day. The Union Portland Cement Co. time every lady was called whether married or not. mlstr!'S~. constructed a plant in Weber can· yon at Devil's Slide in 1906. With four kilns it produces about 2000 barrels of "Red Devil" cement a day, employs an average of 160 men and owns a. town with dwellings, water system, general store, drug store, hotel; clubhouse, recreation grounds and s e we r s. Mountains of limestone and shale slope to within a few yards of the plant. Six and one-half miles northwest or Brigham City a cement plant was built in 1910 by the Utah·ldaho Cement Co. Capacity was increased in 1917 by the addition of a third kiln, to 1300 barrels a day. Later the buildings were partly destroyed by fire and they have not been rebuilt. In the manufacture of cement the rocks are blasted loose in the quarry. Power shoveb load them on dump cars tor transportation to the mill, where huge gyratory jaw crushers reduce Jumps of plano size to fragments. S e c on d a r y crushers break the pieces still smaller. Grinding is often done in ball or tube mills. The former are armor·plated cylinders half filled with tons of steel balls. As the cylinder revolves the balls roll over and over, reducing the material to a fine powder. Before final gl'inding the material is exactly proportioned. Automatic scales, sealed and locked by the plant chemist, measure the proper amount of each !ngredient. In the fine·grlnding machines a thorough mixing takes place and the properly proportioned p0wer goes to the kilns. The kilns are steel-jacketed cylinders lined with fire brick resting on their sides at a slight angle from the horizontal. Heavy gears rotate the kilns, which operate on the blow torch principle. Nearly half a ton ot coal is consumed for each ton of cement produced. •rem· perature mounts to 2500 or 3000 degrees. After several hours the "clinker", about the size of marbles and glass-hard, goes to plies to cool and a wait final grinding. During this second grinding process gypsuld I~ added to regulate the "setting" tIme. Burning produces the chemical change which makes the material so valuable for the construction of highways, streets, sidewalks, public and private buildings, dams, irrigation and water supply sys· terns, se1Jtic tanks, sewer systems, reservoirs, swimming pools, tennis courts, dance floor J and a thousand other purposes. Beside creating direct employment for hundreds or men, the portland cement industry gives work to many more in mining coal and cement materials, in making explosives and In the transportation of materials to the m!ll and the product to the consumers. It not only keeps large sums at home, but brings much money from abroad to better the financial con· d!tlon ot the state. Revenge Doea Not Pay "Revenge ain't much use," snit! Uncle !<~ben. "You can't mnl;e yoh· self happy tryin' to mnke some onl' · el~P I I1' Buy Your Clothes H. F. RASMUSSEN I J I For BEST Results This Season Start Your Pullets On Draper Quality Laying Mash AND SEND YOUR EGGS TO DRAPER EGG PRODUCERS ASSOCIATION W. E. Cain 8 Sons Phone: Mur. 535-W t004 So. 5th East o\.O tAa· ,os1oN S1R •li\\\SY.t'i tt'ft ,, code tto. 208 p\nt • • • • code t\0· 201 o.uatt · · · 60 ,11oof . -: . For desks or tables where reading is done or beside chairs or divans. 28 inches high. Ivory or bronze finish. Aaaorted parchmen shades. Terms, if desired. Complete with 100-watt bulb.. _ . :-;. ·~ ·:·: ..:::· ·····:··· ·..·: .:: $445 Cash Price ml~emhle . " • Percy Whiffletree: "Gosh, I need five bucks and don't know where to get it." Oscar Hassenpfeffer: "I'm glad of that. I was afraid you might think you could get it from me." For general lighting, read. ing, aerving, card or piano playing. Standa 57 inches hiqh. Ivory base. Choice of asaorted parch· ment shades• Complete with 150-watt bulb Terms, if desired STOP IT WITH Alka-Seltzer Does Headache "slow Philosophy Don't get discouraged; remember it's always the last key in the ring that fits the lock. yoa SELTZER in a glass of water makes a pleasant alkalizing solution that usually bri.np relief in just a few minutes. ALKA-sELTZER is also mended for ~ Gas aa Stomach. ''MorDIDa After'' Add IDdJpstl CoW.,'aDd M1Ue111u ...:: You will like the tangy ftaVOI' and the reiUlta when ;you take AJb-8eltpr, Alb-Selbv, wbeD Economics Dept. How to stabilize the countrylet everybody buy a horse. dillolved in water, contains a 8JI8l&esic, (Sodium the alka ate). In additi agents in Alkal::ftzer help to relieve thoee everyda;y dilorders BIIOclated with hyperacidity. Acetyl·SaJ:: Percy Whiffletree gets pretty good mileage with his coupe; about five miles per gal, he says. Small IAlp,...,.... THESE BARGAIN LAMPS Try Our Most Popular Family Service DAMP WASH WITH THE FLAT WORK CAREFULLY IRONED PER FOR POUND ONLY 6C give more glare-free, sightsaving light than the ordinary lamp, using the same amount of current. Recent reductions in the domestic lightmg rate, and Extra Electricity at Half-Price, makea more light available at lower c:ost than ever before. When you think of PRINTING 15 Per Cent discount Cash and Carry REMEMBER You can get it done Phone Enterprise 33 (No Toll Charge) And More Reasonable Beller-Quicker-AT THE UTE SENTINEL pc:k•p 3lc I Caah Price "MORE LEISURE TIME FOR WOMEN" down?" You are a rare exception it it does not. · One or two tablets ofALKA- The National Relations Board is partisan, according to charges made by Senator Nye. That is ridiculous; the Board is absolutely fair to both sides provided neither side is an employer. Sin is not the worst thing in the world. Our sins will, or may, be forgiven, but we have to pay for our mistakes, ponders Dad Gummlt. By FRED H. RICHARDSON ..Miatreaa" Mrs. Is 8bort for mistress. At onP. Definition: Politician: One who is willing to do anything on earth for the workers except become one of them. A turkey is a turkey in any period of history, and roasting is roasting by whatever method. And even though science and invention have displaced the open fireplace of our forefathers with perfectly controlled oven heat, the king of fowls demands a full three or four hours' cooking before it assumes its golden brownness and yields its inimitable flavor. So, though we no longer need to gd\out and shoot down our turkey from the tre~s. we still arise early on Thanksgivinc morning to place it in the oven in order to coax from it all its delicicusness ere dinner time has arrived. Thns it is that many modern homemakers have said, "If only KiTJg •rurkey wouldn't be so high and mighty about keeping us from our sleep on Thanksgiving morning." But not a whit has King Turkey yielded. And so Mrs. The old pasture is baking in the H omemak er t urns t o s t rat egy, th e , · sun· ' only recourse at her command. She now gets Mr. Gobbler all ready on T~: ey~s of earth are heavy, and e rur the day before Thanksgiving, even to the extent of preparing his Is half asleep; the flowers are dead save one stuffing, and relies on her modern air-conditioned ice refrigerator to Torch-like red lily in the wide, white glare, keep both turkey and stuffing properly moist and properly cold. Ho~ding its fragrant, fiery-petalled hps She knows, too, that the tefrigerator is so constructed that the For the sun's scorching kiss, and there upon 'll . . the d ressmg . WI flavors m spicy A tard! raspberry bush, a wild not invade other foods. bee SipS . Our favorite recipe for preparmg The essence from its blooms ere ' th ey are gone. turkey? . , Here it is: First remove the pin feathers and clean the mside of the turkey thoroughly; then The white heat of mid-day lies deep across wash It both inside and out and rub salt on the inside ( lA! to ~i The hills, where cattle are still in repose, teaspoon per pound). After that, stuff the turkey, truss the open- And underfoot, the creeping, mouldy moss ings, fasten with skewers, and tie up the legs and wings. Then place Crumbles away as does the withered rose, the turkey in a shallow roasting And where the oaks turn brown pan and store in the refrigerator. upon the hill, And how to roast it on Thanksgiving morning? Well, first weigh One leaf drops slowly down. and now is still. the turkey to make sure of the -By ELSIE STREETER. length of time it needs to be roast- I his father. Sunday Services10:00 a. m., Morning Worship. 11:00 a.m., Sunday School, Mrs. A. Troester, Superintendent. 7:30 p. m. Epworth League. Everyone is welcome. Let The Ute sentinel do your ed. Then roast in a low, moderate oven ( 325-350 degrees J, allowing printing. 20 minutes per pound for a 12 lb. turkey, 17 minutes per pound for an 18 pound turkey, and 15 minFor STYLE, QUALI'l'Y utes per pound for a 22 pound turand LONG WEAR key. The stuffing? Here is an unusually flavorsome recipe that the -fromfamily will enjoy: Oelery Almond Stuffing 3 cups toasted whole wheat bread crumbs Merchant Tailor :~ cups diced celery CLEANING - PRESSING l;2 to 1 cup celery leaves ALTERATIONS shredded 112 cups whole blanched almonds ~~ cup melted butter or turkey fat 1 tablespoon salt ~~ teaspoon pepper J teaspoon poultry seasoning 2 eggs slightly beaten 1. ~ to % cup water or turkey stock Combine all ingredients, mix thoroughly, and stuff turkey. _ _ _ __ PASTURE IN su;u~IER Your Clothes Last Longer Because They Are Washed In Rain Soft Artesian Water. No job too large, or none too small for our modern plant. PHONE: 1\llDVALE 178 |