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Show EMERY COUNTY PROGRESS, CASTLE DALE. UTAH jCHIC PATCHWORK SPORTS COATS; , AUTUMN HATS TURN TO FEATHERS ;, THE KITCHEN CABINET MART G&HAK BONNER. & 121. W eaters Newspaper Union.) How beautiful It la to bi llv! To ' wake each morn, is U tb I j "JJany and many the time," said ,Mri Itooster, "I've heard' them shout,, ' ing, and asking: "'Is dinner almost ready T V ' "So I always calf the hens, to their meals, and I call them like this: - .' - ' V v "res," said Mr. Puck, ''you don't have to tell me. I've heard your sweet ' tones many days now." 31r. t Rooster crowed ' with), pleasure. He, was , so pleased, so very much pleased that he said : AndI always enjoy bearing your quack, . dear, Mr. Duck." .,.' "But," said Mr. Duck, "you see you have said before that the hens.w.ere like children and that you bad to call them to their meals. "But there'Js a dHTerence."The hens" can see the meals as., you can, but they're a little stupid at times."" . :'s "Ah no," said Mr. Rooster, "do not V say the dear hens are stupid." "J won't say so. IH only think so," eaid Mr. Duck, and Mr. Rooster smiled a nice rooster's smile. He didn't seem to mind in the least as long as Mr. Duck didn't say such things. He didn't mind what he thought "They come pretty quickly," said Mr. Rooster. "And if they see the karmer coming out first at feeding jtlme they gather about him, I can truthfully say that." "An, yes," agreed Mr. Duck. "Still ou are often the first one to see the food "Often, too, yon see a meal which "''- -' ' . , WHEN YOU ENTERTAIN When a larger number of people is being entertained one plans a menu which may be served on 'one plate, as a stand-uluncheon must be served. A hot dish, either in patty shell or as'a pie, a salad, s, small dish Of salted an olive or two and two a A n d wl c h e s. will make a rood menu. For ' 'the hot' dish the following will be 'suggestive!, ' Creamed Chicken With Mushrooms. Put four tablespoonfuls of butter and a slice of onion finely chopped in, a saucepan and cook two minutes. Add four tablespoonfuls of flour, three-fourtof a teaspoonful of salt teaspoonful of pepper, and when smooth add one - cupful of boiling water In which one cube of chicken bouillon has been dissolved. Stir unDo not throw SAVE the pieces! til the. sauce boils, add one cupful of tiniest even the scrap of away thin cream, one and one-hal- f cupfuls silk or velvet for patchwork Is of cooked chicken cut in dice, about no longer confined to the realm of the' size, of half a dollar, and and such. Fact Is, patchquilt pound of mushrooms which work has qualified as one of the have been sauted In two tablespoonmode's chief allies in the field of fuls ftf butter for three minutes. For instance, costume design. Serve In Umbel cases, patty shells or are there the sports patchwork twelve-ounce on toast A can xt tuna bats which are so modernistic MODERN PATCHWORK COAT fish may be used Instead of chicken.' Cubes looking and so colorful. Sandwiches. Cream six and Piquant squares, oblongs and diamonds of Striking originality is expressed in tablespoonfuls of butter, add four silk, or cloth and even leather, are the myriad; of feather hats which are of horseradish, one sewed together to form the crown of crowding In upon the autumn miltablespoonfuls bunch of watercress, chopped, one .these nobby sports hats. The brim linery picture.. One of the very latest teaspoonful of lemon juice and a little is usually of felt or fabric stitched models Is the helmet made entirely salt Spread on thin slices of bread Any woman who has of guinea hen feathers with little and cut in fancy shapes. shellacked wings darting out the knack of "doing things" with Nut and Cherry Sandwiches. Cut needle and thread can make one of at each side. h bread Inch In thickness and these bats, and they repay for all the Extremely wearable, in fact Just with creamed butter. Spread effort they cost fw that Is about all the thing to top one of those lovely spread one slice with finely chopped pistachio they, do cost since bits of silks fur- culorful velvet ensembles which fash-to- n nuts and one slice with finely chopped nish the. material. prescribes for early fall, are the maraschino cherries, cover with a Here's another way of accomplish"coiffure" toques (they fit the head third slice of buttered bread. Place ing a hat modernistic as to color and like a' skull cap). A single round under a light weight until cold. Slice design, instead of sewing scraps of hackle pad forms the top crown with In thin slices. Chopped green pepper material together with opaque colors a wide side band of curled ostrich so may replace the pistachio nuts and pipaint futuristic cubes and squares treated as to lay very flat and orderly. mento may be used In place of the Th3 toque of and '' conventional motifs, ranging pasted cire them In colorful confusion somewhat feathers, as shown in the center of cherries, moistening with- - mayonnaise. with the effect of stained glass. Try the group in this picture, Is particuCreampuffs filled with Ice cream and It I You will take great pride and larly favored by the smart Parlslenne. covered with a chocolate or maple sauce make a most delightful dessert pleasure In such a unique and modish The glossy black of the clred plumage Is very effective. r hat. Baked Eggs- - Take two cupfuls of ,V V toques like Pretty pastel-colore- d The handsome riced potatoes, add two tablespoonfuls patchd work quilts which grandmother used the one to the left are aiso very much of butter, of a cupful of make (yes, call them "crazy" quilts In evidence. This fall," types similar to milk and one-hal- f teaspoonful of salt Beat vigorously three minutes, add If you will but the mode prefers to to this In beige and the new' russet e one and one-hacanned pimentoes speak of the pafchwork ef- shades, also rich greens, reds, browns or as fects modernistic forced through a sieve, and continue .futuristic), and blues, will hold forth in? great are now the Inspiration for a clever number. beating until thoroughly blended. Pile Feathers express the unique, when top coat such as Is here pictured. evenly on a buttered baking dish and Young women are wearing' just such used In a trimming way, to as great make six cavities. In each cavity drop a degree as do the hats. a raw egg; salt and pepper and dot with their simple sports frocks. The process of making a coat after See the unusual feather novelty which with butter. Bake until the eggs are the style of the one shown here is so enhances the felt shape Pictured to set the right a. the top. The curved porSummer Foods. simple. Cut a muslin or sateen founCreamed lobster, lobster bisque or dation after a selected coat pattern. tion resting on the hat Is of iridescent Then sew on the patches as one would feathers tipped with a bright brown salad, are all most enjoyed dishes at on a quilt block. If one could "save wing effect es are but season, any Pasted feather birds are one of the sheer velvet pieces, a gorenough up" pecially well liked durcoat could be made thereof. new Items among augeous outstanding warm weather when ing A cunning :leeveless Jacket (seen In In the pictumn trimmings. millincy oysters are not on the the oval) can be made of French ture i they trim a hat of handsome market MushLobster With . rooms. Wash, peel and cut one pound of fresh in mushrooms pieces. Saute them In four table spoonfuls of butter. Add three tablespoonfuls of flour, one teaspoonful of h salt and teaspoonful of paprika. Cook five minutes then add one and one-hal-f cupfuls of milk and one-hal-f cupful of stock (made from fish bones), cook three minutes, add one-hal-f cupful of cream, two cupfuls of canned lobster and two egg yolks well Pour into a beaten. d of a casserole, cover with crumbs and bake buttered of cupful ten minutes in a hot oven. Lobster a la King. Simmer one-hal- f cupful of minced green pepper, the same of celery and one tablespoonful of minced pimento In one tablespoonful of butter until tender. Add one tablespoonful of flour and when mixed one cupful of milk, added gradually. Season with salt, cayenne, and add two 1 fir i X cupfuls of cooked flaked lobster. Heat, thoroughly and serve on toast Icebox Cake. Line a bread pan or slices of round mold with quarter-Incany standard sponge cake. Put over this a layer of canned apricots, cut In pieces, then a thick layer of whipped cream lightly sweetened and : - I i flavored with almond, another layer of cake and cream with apricots until the mold Is full Then pour over It the apricot juice which has been cooked with one-hal- f cupful of supar until thick, and cooled. Set away In the ice chest for 12 hours or lonsrer, SOME OF THE then turn out on a serving dish. It may be garnished with more whipped AUTUMN HATS cream and bits of apricot. Orange Delicious. Boil two cupfjls of sugar with one cupful of water eight minutes, then add two cupfuls of orange juice. Scald one cupful of cream, add the yolks of two epjrs and s plush flannel. Either crochet a fancy edge soliel, for soliel and hatte.-'cook over hot water until thick, add che smart thing for fall. and such are about It or bind it with galloon trim a pinch of salt and cool, then add to The conservative velours toque at the first mixture with one cupful of mlng of silk oi tinsel cord. The flow as serve which er the pockets, baskets, stIT. cream beaten top to the left is In thr ery new Freeze; heavy with embroidered brown. The hackle festher pads are leaf yarn. gay of when nearly frozen add decidedly are russet color. One of the much Millinery Is trending a shredded, candied orange peel. Line featherward Not only is Paris ex- talked of "bonnet" cloches concludes a melon mold with orange Ice and fill ploiting unique plumage toques, as this group. It features the always with orange delicious. Pack In Ice hats are becoming anu ever fjvorcd shh fenth the cunning little and salt and let stand two hours. called, but unusual feather trims are er trim. JULIA BOTTOMI.EY. presenting a novel phase In the new (cX 1928. Western Newspaper Union season's showings. p pea-nut- one-four- th , rose-color- ed .one-fourt- . all-ov- Pleasure. Is around and which has been forgotten about, a nice worm or two or some extra grains of seed which have been dropped and forgotten about" call: "Yes, then " said Mr. Rooster. " Tou most certainly do," said Mr. Duck. "I'll tell you what I think I ought to be called," said Mr. Rooster. "What?" asked Mr. Duck. 'I think I' ought to be called Mr. Rooster, or the dinner gong. You know I've heard children talking of creatures who acted different parts, clowns and all sorts of people, and they're often called by both names such as Charles the Clown, or Bobby the Bareback Rider. "Yes, that's the way. I don't want to be called Mr. Rooster or the Dinner ' Gong. Mr. Rooster, like to be called "I'd the Dinner Gong. However, either will do." "Just so long as you're called a dinner gong, quack, quack," said Mr. Duck. "Yes, that will be enough," said Mr. Rooster. "That will be an honorable name." "I never would have thought It that, or called it that," said Mr. Duck, "but quack, quack, quack, every one to his own taste!" tnultl-colore- Janet the oldest in a family of four children, delighted in acting as a little mother to the other three. One summer she visited an aunt and uncle who had no children. Each day she grew more homesick and lonely for her little brothers and baby sister, until one evening she decided she could stand it no longer. "Please, Aunty Mabel," she choked, "I think I'd better go home now. You see I'm not used to such an empty family." Children, the Magazine for Parents. How Many Sheep A shepherd who had charge of 135 heep used to fasten them up for the night In four different folds, which varied in size. In the second fold he put twice as many sheep as in the first in the third twice as man as in the second, and in the fourth twice as many as in the third. How many sheep were there in each fold? Answer The numbers of the sheep In the various folds were: 9, 18, 3G, 72. No Place to Go A mother was telling her children the story of the Pilgrims. "Just think, dears, no houses, no schools or churches, and no stores. This Is what the brave Pilgrims had to face when they landed on Plymouth Rock in the dead of winter." She paused to let this fact sink in. Little Prlscilla spoke up : "For goodness sake, why didn't they go to the hotel?" Children, the Magazine for Parents. TntAioaa in aiv krtnia as YYiTinn alav Via a as ia wwrtA-nrkA k .11 n hours throughout the world. burned in twenty-fou- r For his fats and sugars he will, if necessary, turn to shale oil, coa sawdust or petroleum. And even the mysterious vitamines which are ne essary for growth and health will be synthesized in the laboratory. Long before the globe becomes overcrowded legislators will limi the number of new human beings who can be brought into the world. Proper Conscience Training and Obedience Nec essary in Child Development By MRS. JOHN D. SHERMAN, President Women's Clubs. Good children will become good citizens. A child whose conscience! is trained from its earliest days will know right from wrong instinctively, I before it is grown up. Another point is the insistence of obedience to recognized authority, whether it be that of the mother or father or teacher or traffic policeman. Not senseless subservience of a child's whole individuality to superior force ; that is degrading to both children and parents, but obedience, based on the recognition that regulations are made for the benefit of all concerned, and for the sake of the common welfare must be observed. Finally, children must be given the habit of religion. It is the greatest and most essential factor in training of young people. ' A great deal is said about the disrespect and disobedience of the whole younger generation, but I believe the boys and girls' of today are as sound, fundamentally, as they have been in any generation. Disillusioned, utterly frank and utterly intolerant of their elders, yes. But what has made them so? Are not the parents responsible for the very faults we find in the children? Have they given to their children absolute honesty, spiritual leadership in its highest sense, sympathy that strives to understand, an example of loyal obedience to established laws and above all, a love and comradeship which cannot be doubted? If they have not let them be careful in denouncing their boys and ' girls. d one-thir- No Reason to Assume World Is Worse Today Than It Has Been in the Past new-vogu- lf one-eight- well-grease- d Deaf ening Silence J one-eigh- th row-and-ro- Mr. Rooster Crowed With CIENCE has solved forever the problem of providing teeming H man population with food, no matter to what number they mul ply. Even if the world's population continues to increase at 1 present rate nntil, 500 years hence, there is only one square v of arable land left for each human being, man will be able to nouril himself with food synthesized from the sunlight, the atmosphere and t fathomless reservoir of the sea. ; Tor his proteids, the future man will turn to the yeast plant inste of beefsteak. Thirty men working in a factory the size of a city blo can produce in the form of yeast as much food as 1,000 men tilling 57 000 acres under ordinary agricultural conditions. For his carbohydrates, man will turn to new types of vegetation thi will store up solar energy with the same efficiency thatcoal has done. I will grow these in the Sahara desert where a section forty miles squa 5 Maker's grace from nothingness derive, we Tbat might sins, "How happy la our case!" How beautiful it ia to be alivel H. 8. Sutton. Did ua afresh ! DUCK AND ROOSTER With All Fear of Famine By DR. H. E. BARNARD, Industrial Chemist, Chicago. ; , iTest Tubes of the Scientist Have Done Aw By RIGHT REV. CHARLES H. BRENT, Buffalo (Episcopal). Although I wish I could believe a reconciliation between Christian teligion and Bcience has been reached, I cannot find that to be the case, despite the existence of a better understanding. The world today appears worse than formerly because society now lies .before us like an open book. We know more about the whole world today at any given moment than we once knew about our own country. It is true, I suppose, that our day has struck a disturbed patch of history. At any rate, suppressed disorder has burst through the surface of things. The responsibility for the eruption rests squarely on the shoulders of all the people, the rich, the educated, the privileged being the most culpable. . All the ninepins of life have been knocked over fcy our own bowling. We are now engaged in the effort to set them up again, though half expecting some one. will send another ball hurling down the alley of time and mess up the human situation again. Be that as it may, we have no ' cause for complaint or dismav. . . Literalism in Religion Makes Spiritual Greatness Impossible to Attain one-thir- 11 h yw i ik one-quart- By DR. KARL REILAND, New York (Episcopal). Literialism is a vicious, aggregating and'degrading thing in religion. ' is It responsible for more sordidness, sorrow and crime than religion cares to recognize. It makes little men and, little minds and cramps spiritual greatness wherever it is imposed.. You have it finely in Shylock's ' ' : ; ; pound of flesh. Literalism is the refuge of cowardice, not the shrine of courage. It is a fetish either in a code or in a creed, a commandment or a canon. Jesus broke with it in a thousand ways, and because His followers set .it' up in the Holy of Holies of their temple the blight of medieval malaria sickened both science and religion Tor ten hundred and "eyen'today years inhibits religious progress from achieving its shinipg' privileged Give us "spiritual men;. who are mad and to prophets who are fools," use the ancient taunt-Hin- t! let these poets and seers cut the leash of literalism, free the spirit of Jesus from the custody of perversion end give liberty of the spirit to all theni that are by the letter bound. Use of Newspaper by Merchants and Manufac- turers Onlyin Its Infancy By G. ADOLPHE WIEDEMAN, Philadelphia Publisher." Merchants and manufacturers have "scratch the suronly begun to face" in their efforts to harness the newspaper as an advertising force. The newspaper is more powerful than school or college, because it serves as the university of the people. American newspapers have made the masses of the American nation the best informed and instructed peoples of the world. " Correspondents of the Associated Press, on the job daily in all parts of the world, as well as other organizations, make it possible for the newspaper reader to see almost what they see and " learn. news-gatheri- eye-to-e- |