OCR Text |
Show rx - HELPER PAGE SIX THURSDAY, ,NOV. Ssnokey Says: Jr JOURNAL (Utah) 1962 NATIONAL J' BURNED UP MY 8, Tension continued to build day by day until the (following Sun. day when Premier Khrushchev backed down and offered to withdraw the missiles from Cuba. That relieved some of the pressure, but as we go to press it Still is an open question as to wbother thj. difficulty really is over. In any event the trouble has had obvious effects upon the OUTLOOK By Ralph Rohey WEEK OF CRS7S October 22 through 28 will go down as a wrok of crisis in the history of tine United States. With ;k lo President Kennedy's declaration of a military naval blockade of Cuba on (Monday evening, Oct. 2P-- , we were the closest to World make anyone mad! War III that we have ever been, business trend. According to th government there has (been no evidence of consumer scare buying. But in. dividual reports indicate that ther has been at least .some such buying. For example, In Washington D.C., some of the super- markets sold, almost all their canned goods, tmd probably the same thing happened at various other places in the nation. The aggregate of such purchases, however, rnav not be sufficient to make an .appreciable, change MM QOD Chicken 'N Dumplings -- Northern Or Southern? ffhefcibU v- - a. Sf Just balances... shall ye 19:"C). have. -(- Lev. As justice becomes a matter of prayer, we find that no longer do occasions urine when we have to question the justice or the honesty of there with whom we are doing Dimness. total of retail trade. More Important, potentially, was whether business management" decided it had better in- crease inventories. There are no statistics on this as yet. The chances are that the crisis did not last long enough to cause business to get beyond the talk ing stage. In general thre is no reason , why inventories should be built up as a result of the Cuban trouble. We have no sig. nificant shortages at the moment. This does not mean that certain individual items might not be come scarce, but it would not be in the comparable to what we exper ienced in World War II. It would not be comparable be. cause at that time we were just coming out of a long depression Mil when millions of persons did not have the money with which to buy what they wanted, and then with the prosperity that came with the war, there was rationing pretty well across the board. It was about the same with the Korean War. But by around 1958, or a little later, this great backlog of both business and con sumer demands had been filled. One further fact needs' to be Sentioned in connection with the necessity for scare buying. This is that in all our major industries we have un. This traditional favorite arouses a friendly argument. Which is tne true dumpling light, puffy lum;;;n-i!ortor the flat, Southern "il'cl.ers"? Why not try th":n boinv Southern Chicken and Dumpling 4 to 5 lb. cut-u- p Stewing Ch'eken 1 Tabifsji. Salt 1 '4 teasp. Pepper 23 cup Onion, thinly ... i 1Z sliced 8 cups Water , Put chicken, salt, pepper and onion into a large kettb. Add enough water to cover (about 8 cups). Cover and cook over low heat (so water bubbles gently) until tender, about hours. Take off heat Remove chicken. Save chicken broth ; there should be 8 cups. (If necessary add enough water to make this amount) Take meat off bones. Flat Dumplings cups sifted Flour 14 cup Pet Instant (in dry form) 12 teasp. Baking Powder 2 Eggs Sift flour, instant nonfat dry milk and baking powder onto a piece of wax paper. Beat eggs well with fork in a bowl. Stir flour mixture into beaten eggs until mixture leaves sides of bowl and rounds up into a ball. Divide dough in half. Roll half of dough very thin on a board. Cut with sharp knife into about 1 x strips. Repeat for remaining dough. Have chicken broth boiling. Stretch each dumpling slightly before dropping, one at a time, into boiling chicken broth. Cover and cook over low heat (so mixture bubbles gently) about 45 minutes or until dumplings are almost done. Add boned chicken. (See note.) Continue to cook until dumplings are tender, about 20 to 25 minutes more. Serve immediately. Serves 6. Xote: If necessary, add 1 to 2 cups more chicken broth made from bouillon cubes dissolved in boiling water. 2-- Old Fashioned Chicken se 'n Fluffy Dumplings cups sifted Dumplingi 4 to 5 lb. cut-u- p Stewinjf ri- - irffrnrinnrTOnnnTTrrmi-TiiTiiMrwiiiiiii- m-- 1 ii Flour teasp. Baking Powder teasp. Salt teasp. Salt 13 cup Pet Instant (in few grains Pepper dry form) about 8 cups Water 3 Tablesp. Shortening ' 2 sprigs Parsley or 1 teasp. 34 cup Water dried Parsley Flakes Sift flour, baking powder, salt 1 cup Celery, cut in and instant nonfat dry milk into h a bowl. Mix shortening in pieces until crumbly. Stir in water just cups Carrot, cut in h until blended. Drop by tableslices spoons onto chicken pieces in 23 cup Onion, thinly sliced boiling chicken broth (not directabout 10 to 12 dump14 teasp. Marjoram Leaves ly in liquid) lings. Cook slowly (so mixture Put chicken, salt and pepper in bubbles well) 10 minutes with a large kettle. Arid enough hot kettle uncovered, and 10 minutes wcter to cover chicken (about 8 tightly covered. Take off heat. cups). Cover and cook over low Put dumplings, chicken and vegeheat (so water bubbles gently) tables onto hot platter. Spoon part of gravy around chicken. Serve until almost tender (about to 2 hours). Add parsley or pars- remaining gravy separately. Gravy ley flakes, celery, carrot, onion 13 cup Chicken Fat, and marjoram leaves and concooled (saved previously) tinue to cook until tender (45 to Flour 13 cup 60 minutes). Drain and save Have a mixture of the chicken skim chicken off fat and fut ai.d flour liquid; Stir mixture save 13 cup for gravy. Add imo chicken ready. broth quickly but enough water to make 4 cups of thorufrhly. Return to heat; stir chicken broth. until thickened. Serves G. Chicken " 2 1 2-- 12-inc- 1-- 12-inc- well-flour- i Almost every area of Utah richest in Utah, used capacity. Accordingly, each has its ghost towns, but none The town boomed in the 1880's. of these could step up its out was born so spontaneously, lived For a while it ,was the home of put substantially with present Vo uproariously and died so the "boomers" miners, equipment. Steel provides a peras the notorious min- - biers, gunmen and dance hall fect example. At present the esti ing towns that sprang up in the girls who thrived on mining camp mate is that we shall produce Great Basin back in the 1870's, 'money. this year about 8 million tons. 80-- s and 90's. Their names have( Blft a shertff named Pearson The capacity of that industry is a kind of magic as, ring to name s elect. about fifty percent above this fi if they were destined from the (first town sher,ff ed tQ dejm up It is inconceivable that start to be ghosts gure. Frisco and d nerves of steel, was steel could become in short sup Silver Reef, Mercur, Mammouth p,,, and fa3t m known again excepting special and Ophir, Clifton, Gold Hill and to ,have killed as many as six ply types. Automobiles could be pro Knightsville. men in one, night. duced in far larger volume than Some of thesa towns, like Mam. currently is planned. And so it is mouth and Gold Hill, can only Despite the reputation of its Frisco became the wiliest pretty much from one end of be termed semi-gho- st towns since sheriff, : i n. the economy to the other. mp m wn, wun ""'"""S a few still live there. and There was another develop But for persons saloons almost nihtly the most part, the popu- ment announced during the week in9- - In '1885 a mine cave.in in the, cemeteries far This was of great importance. Milfrs outnumber the permanent resi-- 1 9peUed Frisco's doQmthat the consumers price level dents, and the peace tumbled to and quiet !left and the t old buildings, spurted upward. This increase that reigns todav i. far orvlruin- - Today. a had nothing to do with the Cuban from t,hv hniAiwn, lsnMrhfr tfcatiwe overgrown foundations and crisis it could not be the re- once rose from the corner saloons. charcoal kilns mark the site. sult of that because the. price Another rich silver strike was lAll of the ghost towns in the locatfd at Silver Reef, north of survey upon which this index is based was made before the block Great Basin do not have illus- - St. George near the little town ade was declared. The increase trious pasts. of Leeds. Today, only desert ani- was the largest from one month Knightsville, for example, was anals and tourists tramp through to another since 1958. It lifted founded by Mormon industrialist the town's deserted streets. In the index to 106.1. The base of Jesse Knight and is remembered its zenith, Silver Reef produced this measure is tJhe average of today as being "the only mining great amounts of silver, as much ' 9. camp in Utah without a saloon." at 9 million ounces in 30 years. Old Iron Town, too, near Cedar Now only a ghost remains. The The main causes of the sharp increase, according to nwan City was founded by Mormons, nvined foundations of churches, Clague, Commissioner of the Bur. who smelted the West's first Iron saloons, houses, gambling dens, eau of Labor Statistics, were the ora there back in J 852. The orig. schools and dance halls gape recent farmers meat strike and inal masonry coke ovens built by emptily toward tihe open sky. An old ramshackle an unusually large increase in the pioneers are still standing. bank 'building, One of the most colorful ghost brush and weed choked, still clothing prices. This does not a reminder of Utah's stinds. lessen the significance of the towns isl Each Utah ghost town has its rise, but it does mean that there early silver mining boom is no reason to assume we are Frisco, located just west of Mil- - own ftory. Back in the 1890's, on th verge of a continuous up-- ford on State Highway 21. Frisco M00,O00 in .gold (bullion was ta- swin in these prices. was the home of the famous Horn in four years from deposits Silver Mine, at one time the near Gold Hill in western Utah. ,1) ten, , - ubout gam-complet- i . ! T.U.-- 1. Alta, now famous as a ski resort near Salt (Lake City, was once a mining boom town, the home of the rich Emma Mine which in its short life produced $35,000,000 in ores. Th-town of losepa (pronounced YojSay-iPa- ) in isolated Skull Valley west of Salt Lake City-waonce the home of a colony of Hawaiian Mormons who came to Utah in (189, left in 1916 when a Mormon temple was built in their homeland. Mercur, also-wes-t of Salt Lake, once a thriving city of 6,000 was twice destroyed by fire at the turn of s kil)-latio- ns j Pamper those delicate fabrics, take good care of those "miracle" synthetics . . . treat them to the tender care that only a flameless electric dryer can give. LESS FADING. From heavy clothes to the sheerest fabrics, colors stay bright and true . . . white clothes don't yellow . . '. because flameless electric heat is 100 pure. KEEP THAT "NEW" LOOK. Pure, radiant electric heat is precisely controlled, even and gentle . . . gives your clothes the loving care they need to keep that "new" look longer. FRESHER SMELLING. Diapers, dresses, shirts, and towels . . . they all come smelling fresh as all outdoors with electric heat. LESS IRONING. A flameless electric dryer trims ironing time in half. Many clothes require no ironing at all. Others thanks to. precision electric controls come just right for faster ironing ... no wet spots to slow you down. An electric dryer costs up to $40 less to buy . . . and gives you so much mort for so little. Your dealer has just the model for you. Sec him today! - ne Winter's coming. JACK'S SALES Expert RADIO-T- V - SERVICE . service by a Technician trained by DeVry Technical and RCA Institutes. WE SERVICE ALL 19S7-I195- Buy now fromyour dealer. UTAH POWER & LIGHT CO. i MAKES, MODELS Car Radios Home Radio Set r Television repair sets in the home when possible in our modern shop when not at the home. We well-equipp- ed Phone 472-33- 38 PICKUP and DELIVERY j Utah "Ghost Towns" Top Tourist Attraction October, that traditional month of ghosts, witches, goblins and Halloween, is an ideal time of the year to visit Utah's fabulous, eerie, ghost towns. It's true not many believe in ghosts, but if there are such things, they're sure to haunt the many little, towns in the Beehive State that somewhere in the past boomed, busted and went their way. A visit to one or more of Utah's ghost towns was suggested this wcek by D. James Cannon, di rector of the Utah Tourist and Publicity Council. The suggestion was made as part of the cur rent "See Utah" , campaign, designed to better acquaint Utahns with their home state. l I I rwVt"- - 1 THORIT HATCH kitchen extension phone brings your calls where you're cooking. Saves you time and Bteps. conserves scarce counter space. Take your choice of colors: sunny yellow, white, beige or pink. To add the ueenuness oi a wau pnone to pilOZX! your kitchen, just call our business office k your telephone serviceman. The cook's best friend 13 Her kltonen "'"J COUNT AIM STATU TttKPHCSI A nillflK. M(lNFY-SiVIN- I5 AIITflldAH SFF US FIRST - - Before you buy a new or late used model car arrange for LOW-CO- ST BANK FINANCING AT CARBON EMERY DANK MORE for those extras you want from savings on our lower rates. MONTHLY PAYMENTS ADJUSTED TO YOUR INCOME. BUILD important Bank credit as you pay your bank auto loan. Professionals A FflR LOWER liri. to guy a New Car? (going Ml ECONOMY Lawyer AND FAST FRIENDLY SERVICE. Phone GR an - - rni r exe)ee)e)e MITCH ELL FUNERAL HOME . Dick Mitchell 160 So. Main Helper, Utah ttabelmer k funeral Director Phone ICS 7M9t-?rf- ce Ut Carbon Ennery Bank 45 South Carbon Ave. Price, Utah Member Federal Reserve System & Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. |