OCR Text |
Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY,' OCTOBER 2, 1930. New Freedom of Women Raises Standard of Music' 7 PAGE FIVE "Now after about a year of this sort of thing, the eel shopkeeper, who was an avaricious fellow, presented a bill one fine morning to his neighbor to the following purport: " 'For sniffing 33,769 eels being broiled at so many one hundreth. ' of a Mon. total due so many pieces of gold.' "The sniffer of cooked eels, without turning a hair, immediately unlocked his strong box, counted out the gold pieces due and placed them in a bag. This he shook, rattling the coins inside and remarked: 'For the smell of your eels I pay you with the sound of my money. "So That was that" ! A Daily Good Turn at the Utah State Fair, October 4 to 1 Ml 1 mo. Western Newapapar Union.) (. "The workshop of character la. everyday lile. . The uneventful and commonplace hour la where the battla la won or leaf GOOD THINGS rr As a nation we eat more candy capita than any on the globe, like it,e and find it wnoie-somand nutritious and yet our confectioners are sending out literature to urge us to eat more. Here are new ones, some which we all like: Candied Yams. Take six sticks of cinnamon candy pulverized. Yum, yum can't you remember when a stick of candy was a great treat? Dice six marshmallows and chop four ounces f Brazil nuts. Slice cooked sweet potasix medium-sizetoes ' and place In a buttered baking dish, sprinkle with some of the dot with butter, using two tablespoonfuls to the dish; add some from a naif cupful of raisins, the pulverized candy to which has been f added cupful of brown sugar. Repeat until all the Ingredients are used, having a layer of marshmallows on top. Bake In the oven until it is a delicate brown. It Is well worth a trial. Patty Shells With Nut Cluster. Put one cupful of nut cluster candy through the food chopper, add one cupful of whipped cream and a few drops of almond flavoring. Heap in pastry shells and serve well chilled. One may use small cup cakes hollowed out instead of the pastry shells, which will be better if children are to be served. Butterscotch Puddina. Mix one cupful of brown sugar, three tablespoonfuls of flour, two beaten eggs, stir well, then add one pint of rich milk and cook until smooth in a dpulrte boiler. Just before taklag from the fire add one-hacupful or more of peanut brittle which has been crushed TEACH THEM SAFETY Rural teachers should realize that since each year sees more and more autos on the highways that it becomes more necessary to warn school children against them. City and town teachers are commencing to make safety lessons a part of their daily routine. They find that it is impossible to warn the children too frequently. They must be constantly reminded to be careful, and that the auto is a But a few dangerous machine. moments daily are required to instill into them the safety lessons that will safeguard them while they are on their way to and from school, or using the highway at any other time for walking purposes. There is no special text-boo- k on the subject, for none is needed. Common sense is the best text-booand every teacher has a full measure of that, else he or she would not be teaching. Use common-sens- e in your safety lessons--b- ut use it often. Even then there will be some children killed or injured. But the number will be constantly reduted. d marsli-mallow- s, one-hal- 3 AH2TEY JEULEF v- ; V- Sintt Mar - flaj-ji- e juer ite Night Club Also Marks j A Step in Social Advancement ! ei i- !- . . New Haven, Connecticut. The passing of the dance hall and the advent of the night club marks a step in social advancement which is reflected in the present day music, asserts Barney Rapp, musical director of the Terrace Restaurant here. "The new freedom of women demanded that all places of amusement be open to iv' n and the standard had to be rs d to meet their demands," says 'Mr. Rapp. "This step also raised the morale The darKctoudshanj oursh-id- l .; : . of the boys. They are better behaved than they used to be in the dance hall. "The effect on music lias been requests for sweet music of ths ballad type instead of the formtr popular 'hot' tunes. The sweeur' the tune and the music the more requests. 'Since Masrgie Became' Marguerite,' the wakz song- asked, for by everyone, gets thf tigest hand and often I have to piny it a half dozen times an rvcn'r.jr." Mr. Rapp is a f?.mou. VioecVait-in- g artist and fc'.s broll.t-- is Lou Ropp. former cr;tai o; ti e Yale watr xm'j t.m and warr- - r.)'--- p'ver fir :';e years,; win i'xigr. nth the band. lf fine. The Utah State Fair of 1930, which opens October 4 and runs to October 11, promises to be one of the most wonderful exhibitions ever seen in Utah, according to Honorable Ceo. H. Dern, Governor of the State of Utah. No effort has been spared, he says, to improve the type of exhibition and entertainment offered. Special attention has been paid to securing outstanding judges in each class of com- - r petition. New buildings and physical improvements have been added and the prospects generally are very bright. Utah citizens, he continues farther, should be proud of their State Fair and happy to attend it. It offers a maximum amount of clean, wholesome entertainment and at the same time is a most dramatic education in the resource and possibilities of the State. We Seek a Foreign Flavor Though We Stay at Home ? Anna B. Town yon're going to Paris! No, not eating around the SOI'm world this summer. But some of the world is coming to my table ' tn the delicious national dishes I carried home in taste and mind, i go on the French national birthday, confiJuly 14 (I take you into my dence) I am planning a luncheon for my tourist friends who dined i with me one Bastile Day in Paris at a pleasant cafe on Champs thoroughly. When ready to serve, combine the lobster, celery ana mayonnaise. Arrange on a bed of crisp lettuce. Garnish with capen or grated truffle. Yield: 6 servings. "We think that conspicuous events, striking- - experiences, exalt- ed momenta, have most to do with our character and capacity. We are wrong. Common days, monotonous hours, wearisome paths, tell the real story. The vision may be the dream may awaken on some mountain top, but the test, the triumph ia at the foot of the mountain, on the level plain." Sauce. Cbeoolate Poor the tomato juice into the stirring vigorously. Add ice and ena hop tug Serve immediately ms&k, la eUDed giaaees. Yield: I pa iit 4 servings. Leboter Beted hhUT la TtarrfaSw am lobttar. Chffl and prosperity to your community. It is constantly advocating those things that bring the home people closer together, and does it in such (a manner that it stimulates a more vigorous public spirit. It pulls for the home city all the time and applauds vociferously those that do constructive work. Your interests and this newspaper's are identical. Yoshio Nitobe, editor of the Japan Times and Mail (Tokyo), says: "In this old world of ours you have to give value for what you receive or you will be placed in the embarrassing position of the broiled eel of old Tokyo. "Next to a broiled eel shop of Tokyo long ago there moved a thrifty soul who loved the smell of this delicacy being cooked. "So every evening after his bath he would sit by his upstair's window and sniff the fragance of the broiled eels which rose to his nostrils. shop-keep- er APPLES SAUCES-- i water add one Winter Bananas mon, and one-four- teaspoonful of salt thorouahly Cook until the flour has lost its raw taste and the mixture thickens, stirringJto prevent lumping. Beat in two tablespoonfuls of butter and remove from the heat, adding one-hateaspoonful of vanilla or coffee extract. This is good served hot on ice cream, custards or baked puddings. Hard Sauce. Cream together s of a cupful of butter and cupful of powdered sugar, add one-ha-lf teaspoonful - of vanilla and teaspoonful of grated nutmeg. Long beating makes a creamy, hard sauce. Add the sugar slowly. For variety substitute brown sugar and flavor with maple or grated lemon or orange rind. Horseradish Sauce. This is good with fish or cold meat and well liked with beefsteak. Beat one-hacupful of cream until thick', add one-hateaspoonful of salt, one teaspoonful of sugar, three or four tablespoonfuls of fresh grated horseradish and a teaspoonful of vinegar. Good for a sauce over cooked beets. Spanish Sauce. Add two tablespoonfuls of chopped onion to two tablespoonfuls of butter and cook until tender and yellow. Add one f cupful chopped green pepper, of celery, two teaspoonfuls of minced parsley, one bay leaf, two cupfuls of tomato, one tablespoonful of flour and salt and pepper to taste. Blend the flour with a little butter before adding to the sauce. Oook for half an hour, remove the bay leaf, cook ten minutes longer, adding the flour and butter at this time. Now add four tablespoonfuls ef minced hap and ' serve at once. mixed. 3 BLOCKS NORTH OF THE VALLEY HOSPITAL, TREMONTON PHONE 54.0-- 2 lf 1 cap Saa sraari . FIRST TO GAIN Food price declines during 1930 have been astounding. Prices on many items are lower than they have been in 17 And with years. each decline, our customers have been first to gain. To us, food declines are important only insofar as they help our customers. If you are looking for grocers who have interest at omers. JUST WONT EAT BREAD one-four- three-fourth- one-eigh- th lf Free! Free! Free! lf axtraet lat4 aacar Sift flour, then measure. Reaift twice with baking powder and salt Cream fat, add sugar and cream Add unbeaten egg until smooth. whites and beat until mixtore has the appearance of softened marmh-aQow. Add dry ingredients and diluted milk, then the flavoring. Bake in layer cake pans, lined with paraffin paper in a moderate oven (S60-375 F.). When baked, torn eat on paraffin paper. Cool, and cat into little cakes with cookie' cutters of various shapes. Fleet with pastel tinted icings. omers. heart, shop in our O. P. Skaggs System store today. The quality foods we sell at the markets' lowest costs will convince you that we mean it when we our greatest say thought is our cust- Marcus Woolley th greatest thought is and always has been our customers. We are constantly seeking to render him benefits in food quality and price values. when Naturally, prices decline, we are happy. It means one thing to us benefit for our cust- your A LUSCIOUS APPLE TO EAT AND A GOOD COOKER table-spoonfu- ls one-hal- m ' That the greatest of all blessings is happiness. Happiness does not always consist of what one gets out of life, but comes from what one puts in it. The surest way to bring prosperity to a community is for every citizen to spend his cond money at home with cerns. In this way the money keeps circulating at home, giving happiness and prosperity to you and your neighbors. You will express your faith in your home home city by joining in all efforts to make it a still better place in which to live and make a living. ' cupful of brown sugar, two of flour, a dash of cinna . ...... ' To one of boiling cupful Pl&iH Love Apple Cocktail " Butterscotch j ' FISH, MEAT ' A delicious sauce to serve on a cottage pudding or any steamed cake Is: iiMpinn vhn frecment French restaurants in this country await the hors d'oetrvres with curiosity and a happy anticipation. Don't aak me to translate hors d'oetrvres for you. I can only do it by broadly describing them as a variety of Bat Kearoml wtth OhMM Cutatd TmA PleklM Prgaa) StaM wtth Sharp rmn nan Oiaaai taaah las 1930. Western Newtnaper Unldn.i DESSERT, eaU cuts, delicious salads, pickled ifMtta and vegetables all brought solicitous waiter ' to yon by your who suggests that madam try a Cheese Custard Hole of all of them. And his tray CvAmri Whittl so is intriguing of hors d'oeuvres S ttap. cold watar K his oap find yourself following that yon Daaa peppar cap H"""d milk snCgeatkm. Up. utt 1 aop avapantal tbp.BMUa Kven if you are not serving a ZUbatter milk dilated Yith TasaHlii luncheon you can combine 3 1 tbep. (rates chaaat pwaaar fits hors d'oeuvres for a Sunday gralaa aaramns fw kgat buffet supper some time. Faw aavps anjaa----. i The hm Jaiaa..:,,.vtvM ttoa and coolnff drink '.Beat eggs slightly and add reminr Trill have to. take the place maining cujrtard ingredients. Turn win which you into battered baking cops. Set in f the rare Freaeh right aetact on Bastile Day in a pan of hot water and bake in a slow oven (300 F.) until set and Tat dessert I shall serve French tap is brown. Remove custards t lee cream and petit fours. These a hot platter and pear around them Jt&t cakes are aehcioui and pretty a white sauce prepared from butsad I am including them among ter, floor, pepper, salt and dilated milk. Yield: 6 servings. , the recipes. Bastile Day Menu Petit Peers d'eeaTTM Bars 1 H capon Tatee caps pastry Aw QalMiMi Toofa 3 tbap. cnaparataa 4 tap. baking CsM 0t milk SDrta with pawdar OooM liver 8Mr 6 ttap. watar M tap. aaM Opm rced Sandwich! ft capiat (half Aagie Oecktail 1 tap. koaaa axtraet Wktarmaion PteklM liiiilii ff ' f H tap. aaaaae attar) I Our You should support this newspaper not halfway, but all the way, for it takes the lead in bringing happiness home-owne- ((c). OUR THOUGHT Salt Lake Boy Scouts are with the Police Department in keeping track of lost kiddies at the Utah State Fair, October 4 to 11. This little Miss thinks it will be all right if the Scouts will help her find her mother. Thousands are in attendance every day at the .State F .'ir and the Scouts perform invaluable service in keeping youngsters in touch with their parents and in directing the visitors to the many wonderful features offered. ., The KITCADH i . OUR CUSTOMERS Candied Salad. This is not new but Place a ring of may be to many: pineapple on lettuce, In the center of the ring place a section of banana to resemble the candle. Top with a red candy cinnamon drop or a candied cherry. Garnish with yellow salad dressing prepared very thick and running down the sides of the .1?. lighted candle. Governor Dern Predicts Unusual State Fair October 4 to 11 , k, ' A lovely plate glass mirror absolutely FREE with each $2.00 purchase of Decoret or Rubber Cement Floor Paint. From Oct. 4 to 18. These are FULLER PRODUCTS. Wilson Lumber Co. "EVERYTHING to BUILD ANYTHING" Phone 11 Tremonton For the child who "just bread" won't eat we recommend our O. P. S. R a i s.i n Bread Chock-fu- plump, ll of large, selected raisins, how this bread will 'register.' Instead of passing up bread, in a few days your child will be begging for just one more slice. An ideal way to supply a growing child its necessary iron and vitamins. On sale at our store regularly at 5c per olaf. This is regular 16 oz. 10c size and quality. Try it today. O. P. S. Bread available in white and health varieties, also. QJRSIKVGGS A Surety of Purity" |