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Show t ' (yioofmyyxvyyyyymmyxio i! CThe Kitchen f. a Cabinet ouxxAXXxxxxxuioimuooooo (OS. ISIS, Wnura Nwppr Union.) INEXPENSIVE DISHES While the tender celery la at lta beat In onr gurdens, let us eut freely of It. Aa a lunelieon Ulab It la especially attractive. The coaraer outside atalka may be cut op and cooked for this dish. Take two cupfuls of cooked celery, put a lay er in a buttered baking dish, add a layer of thick whiteaauce.tbena sprinkling of cheese and unother layer of celery; finish with a layer of white sauce and cover with buttered crumbs. Bake until the crumbs are brown. Missouri Chicken. I'lace a good-sizepiece of fresh pork (one of the cheaper cuts), in the pan with the stuffed and roasting chicken. Around the meat place peeled sweet potatoes and baste them often while roasting. Season the pork well and the flavor of the chicken and pork will blend, making n delicious gravy. Oysters In Cucumber Cups. Cut large cucumbers Into two pnrts, cross wise; scoop out the centers and slice a piece off each end to make them stand upright. Fill with raw oysters and hake In a hot oven until the cucumbers are tender. Serve with a spoonful of tartar sauce in each cup. .Minced fish or lohatet may be used in place of the oysters, if they are not avnllahle. Corn Pudding. Open and air a can of corn for an hour before using. Beat three eggs, add a pint of rich milk, the corn, salt, pepper, and one-hal- f ttasponnful of Worcestershire sauce. CW until the mixture la d firm. 6. Sweet Potatoes ; Jtjnk.- Cook the potatoes In their skins un- til soft. Cut them after peeling into thick slices and lny them In a greased baking dish. Sprinkle' with sngnr and add butter to each layer. Bake In a slow oven at least an hour. Tlnee a marshmallow on top of each slice and let It puff and brown, Just before serving. Beets are never better than when prepared and buked In the oven until tender. Feel, chop, dress with butter, pepper and salt and a dash of vinegar. Olive oil Is especially good instead of butter. Serve very hot Inviting Dishes. A head of lettuce with a good salad dressing Is a salad which appeals to almost all tastes. It Is difficult to analyze a dressing when all the Ingredients are not In some visible form. Garlic has been tabooed by people who have never used or tasted It. Simply the mention of garlic is enough to call forth criticism. When correctly used garlic makes a delicate, indescribable and appetizing flavor; it Is also a natural aid to digestion. One of the recent recommendations given for garlic is that eaten dally, one dove on retiring. It Is a cure for hlh blood pressure. Garlic vinegar Is easily prepared and is alwnys ready to add to any salad dressing. To a small clove of garlic, finely sliced, add a pint of vinegar : let stand In a bottle three weeks, si rain and put away for use. Cherrys Dressing. Take two tablespoonfuls each of chopped red and pro- - n pepper, both of the sweet variety; add one tablespoonful of powdered sugar, a teaspoonful of salt, of a teaspoonful of red pepof a cupful of good per. vinegar and one cupful of the best olhe oil, one small southern onion Shake In a pint Jar finely chopped. for live minutes, then set away to chill. This u 111 keep for two weeks In an ee vhest. Peach Butter. Pare and cut Info sl'cis fully ripe freestone peaches of Add a third of a cuppood flavor. ful of water to a pound of fruit, cook and mash all the time; add tpn finely chopped blanched peach kernels and s of a pound of sugnr to each pound of fruit, weighed before rooking. Cook, stir and test by try-- , Ing a little on a cold plate. Be careful In the cooking as It burns easily. Vtermelon and muskmelon are not oftei, associated with salads, but they aild greatly to the flavor and appearance of any sulud In which the flavor Idcnds. Diced pineapple, green grapes cut Into hnives, peeled and seeded; bananas, a ripe pear eut Into strips, and a dozen quartered murshnmllows make a flue salad, with spoonful of mayonnaise added to a cupful of cream. Dip the scissors In water and the marshmallows will cut euRlly. Club Sandwich. On a piece of buttered toast lay a sliee of cocked chicken breast, over It lay a very thin slice of dill pickle; on this a piece of crisp, cooked bacon, and cover with a lettuce leaf. Serve cut In triangles. Spong Bananas. Cover the bottom of a baking dish with small sponge rakes, rover with a layer of bananas, sprinkle with sugar and he Juice of lemon, odd chopped nu's. and bake Serve with custard or 15 minutes. tldck cream. one-quart- one-fourt- h three-fourth- three-cornere- 'Xtltu. d CG. Its a Privilege Color Chari Freeihis that H tells how to decorate any room in the house for less than $1.00 to Ogden. The first mayorallty date to be entered In the race Let a sometime live be It only for an hour, and though ws Hunt lay all aalda to mnks Othara smlls. Chnrles Wngntr. . News Notes Live in candiIn Og- Ogden. Because of the financial condition of Ogden city, the city manager form of government Is all the more desirable. Mayor P. F. Kirkendall told members of the Exchange club in an address upon city affairs. The poor financial condition is due to the passing of the buck" from one administration to another, the mayor said. Salt Lake City. Apparently crazed with jealousy. Dr. Allan D. Bentz, young local dentist shot and probably fatally wounded Miss Melba Brown, slightly wounded Harvey Kirk, and then killed himself by firing one shot from a small caliber pistol through his left temple and three into his breast issued Ogden. Building permits during month of August amounted to 101,650, according to the monthly report of City Building Inspector Carl C. Gariff. The total for the corresponding month of last year wfas 113,-20- 0. " . The the return for taxmade by the Chief Consolidated Mining company to the state board of equalization In 1924 was not a return at all within the meaning of the Utah law, is the charge made by Mammoth City, a municipal corporation, in action Instituted in the Fifth Judicial district court lu Juab county. The suit virtually asks for a court definition of the terms mine or mining claim as it Is found in the present mine assessment laws passed in 1919. Ogden. Movement of grain, prla ctpally wheat, from Idaho points and other sections tbrough Ogden, is much heavier than usual, according to E. It. Alton, president of the Ogden Grain exchange. According to Information received by Mr. Alton Fom railroad officials approximately 1000 carloads more have passed thru Ogden to date than had passed thru at the corresponding date of last year. It is estimated that this is 1. 500,000 bushels ahead of last year. Salt Lake City. Butler B. Ramey, proprietor of the Semloh hotel and well known hotel man, died at a lo cal hospital following a brief and sudden lllneBs. For more than twenty years he was connected with a number of hotels of Suit Lake. Andrew Garbin, Salt Lake City. 36, suspected bootlegger and narcotic vendor, was shot and killed; Patrolman S. II. Neve, 35, was wounded in the left breast and Albert Lewis, 15, a bystander, was shot through the left lung In a battle between officers and Garbls at the latter's home. Mammoth. Write today. Before you spend a ilngie penny for decorating, learn all about King Wall Finish the re- MATURING PULLET ADVANTAGES OF AN BEFORE SHE LAYS IMPROVED HIGHWAY den Is George E. Browning, former postmaster and prominent business man, Mr. Browning was waited upon by a large group of citizens, chiefly business men, who asked him to enter the race for mayor and pledged him support. Mr. Browning consented to their request and entered the race, It was announced following the conference. Salt Lake City. As a result of the rigid system of economy inaugurated by the city commission, city expenditures for August were 1 13,600 less than they were during the corresponding month of 1924, according to the monthly report of the city auditor. Murray. Stringent measures to curb speeders and in other ways to enforce observance of the traffic rules are being put Into effect by the Murray City authorities, especially on the state highway as it passes through the city. Price. A thorough chlorination of the entire Price City water system has been effected as a safeguard against possible spreading of typhoid in this community through contamination of the drinking water. There are eleven known cases of typhoid fever in the city. The first was drawn to hte attention of health authorities on August 16, and the total has slowly mounted since that time. Mt. Pleasant. A threshing machine belonging to the Thompson brothers of Mt. Pleasant was completely de mollshed by spontaneous combustion caused while threshing smutty wheat at Indlanola. Two hundred bushels of wheat belonging to Peter Simpson W'as also destroyed. James Thompson who was operating the machine, had left It Just a few minutes before the explosion .and no one was injured. Salt Lake City. Carlos Ariza, for several years consul ' of the Mexican republic in Salt Lake, notified Governor George H. Dern that he has been relieved of his duties here, and has been ordered to assume a similar post at Calexico, California. Mr. Ariza, in his letter, also told the governor that his successor, Carlos M. Gaxiola, has arrived in this city and will assume charge of the local Mexican consulate Immediately. Ogden. The park commission of Ogden has recommended to the city commissioners that an offer of $40,-00- 0 cash be tendered to Sanford liar-ru- p and Chris Aadneson for the sanitarium property at the mouth of Ogden canyon, according to Mayor P. F. Kirkendall. It is expected that the city commission will do this soon. ation purposes Tim SPANISH FORK rURS. SPANISH FORK. UTAH One of the best discussions of a good method of flulshlng pullets cornea from the pen of Mrs. George IL Shoup of the Western Washington experiment station, which Is as follows : To put on body growth, give a low open hopper of cracked yellow corn yellow cornmeul. Keep it full aU tf the time. Feed a full breakfast of sprouted oats or scratch, using so much that a little grain Is In the litter at the next feed. At breakfast time or shorty after give sour milk, or a substitute, using four to six quurts to the hundred birds. At 11 a. m. again d feed scrutch grain and also give a amount of green feed. At 2 p. m. another feed of grain and at 5 or 6 p. m., a last feed of grain and also all the greens they can eat A good growing mash should be before them as much In hoppers, giving mash as grain by weight This proWont you eat a little?" gram says: over and over, and at night you will have the satisfaction of having these young ladles going to bed with crops only partly tilled. As long as this Is continued you know these birds are growing bodies, not combs, and you may be surprised to fiud that lu four weeks time these same youngsters will s have gained anywhere from to one and pounds each, without having come Into laying. When maturity (full body growth) has been reached, you can put on the laying program and feel that one more point In poultry management lias been put under definite control. A number of such details as this used by one and neglected by another makes the difference of steady, or spasmodic, egg production during the following year. In short. It helps to make one e poultry man who makes his chickens keep him and not one who Just keeps chickens. fair-slze- one-quart- three-fourth- one-quart- yeurs ago the advantages of good roads were considered purely from the aspect of social betterment. The economic features were not fully understood. F.vrn when the motortruck was Introduced the people tn general did not realize what this meant lu relieving the railway of Its short-haproblem, nor of the advantages that would result In the furmcr being able to put down at the town dwellers door the fresh eggs, poultry, vegetables, and other farm produce that had been wasted In the pust because of the lack of good roads. It was an Impassable sea of mud that stood between the farmer and the consumer. When the demand was great and the market price moat attractive, the farmer was hampered by lack of a serviceable road. Ieople who have given the subject considerable study, state that from 40 perlsli-abl- e per cent upward of crops actually do perish because markets are Inaccessible when the demand Is greatest. Uncertainties of also cause highway transportation crowded markets and low prices when demand is only normal or below normal. The fanner wants to unload bis entire crop when the roads will let him, and since the fanner" means more than 0.000, (WO producers. It Is not strange that the profits suffer from such overstocked markets. In many sections where permanent roads have been built, unexpected uses for them have been disclosed. Farm markets have been organized and the townsmen or housewife drives directly to the producer for eggs and butter, fruit and, vegetables. It Is a satisfactory arrangement for both, and there Is but one profit from tbe farm to the dinner table. In other sections bard roads havs been the menus of bnnlsldng tbe country srhoolhouse where was dispensed In doubtful doses. Instead of tbe poorly equipped a central consolidated schoolroom, school Is feasible, and the motor has carries as high ss 43 pupils from the farm home to the school. Stormy weather does not Interfere with the attendance of the school, for the road Is always the same. Medical men have said that hardsurfaced roads are beneficial from s health standpoint, as they are clean and free from dust This Is also an attractive Item for the housewife, as It makes less work. In every section where hard roads have been built the many advantages are being multiplied as the general public comes to realize tbe real worth and possibilities of highways. They are gradually taking advantage of the roads, not merely as a means of getting somewhere, but as a powerful force In community development and welfare. Cholera and limberneck are two diseases that attack the poultry flocks and cause the loss of a number of birds each year, says D. II. Hall, extension poultry specialist at Clemson college, who suggests below methods of treatment for these troubles. Cholera Is one of the worst diseases that Is known In the poultry business. It attacks the fowls very suddenly, and as a rule a poultry-ma- n d to one-haloses from his flock before he. can do anything. The best treatment Is to prevent the spread of the disease rather than to treat the sick birds. Spray the house with a 10 per cent solution of some disinfectant, and burn or bury all of the droppings and dead fowls In deep holes. Feed wet mash In troughs so as to prevent spreading through dry mash hoppers. Keep the water founf tains clean and use permanganate potash as an antiseptic In the drinking water. Limberneck Is a disease resulting from poisoning of the fowl caused by feeding on decomposed animal flesh. This disease Is characterized by a paralyzed condition of the body. The neck becomes limber and the head cannot be held erect. In treating ibis disease give each bird two teaspoonfuls of castor oil with a few drops of turpentine, and find the cause of the disease and remove It Bury or burn all dead fowls. lf one-thir- Five Excellent Reasons for Standard Bred Hens Here are five reasons for keeping standard bred poultry: More uniform in size, type and color. More attractive In appearance and appeals more strongly to purchasers of stock and eggs. Offer a greater combination of practical and useful qualities suitable to the needs of the farmer and poultry keeper. The products of stnndard-brefowls are rocsive uniform In quality, are in greater demand, and bring better prices. Standard-brepoultry means greater auceess and better profits. d Average Production of Hens in Ordinary Flock flock of liens that averages 1U0 eggs a year per hen Is a good flock. A Here ig the number of eggs per hen sueli a flock should average in each month ; Not ember December 8 10 10 10 12 21 January February March April May 20 June July 18 IS 12 AlIKbst 7 September October ' Best Poultry Tonics eggs teas eggs eggs eggs eggs eggs eggs eggs eggs eggs eggs Fresh air, sunshine and exercise are the best tonics that enn be given poultry. But fresh air does not mean drafts In the houses, nor does sunshine coll for exposure to the hot sun's rays during the summer. Lilt the houses should be so constructed that fresh air will be present both day and night, and the atmosphere purified. They must, too, be so arranged that the sunshine may reach every comet of the Interior to destroy germs that mot lie lurking In ilumpm- cet when you decorate with KINCJ WALL FINISH. Isnt It worth Investigation? Write todsy for name of nearest dealer snd I KEE Color Chsrt, showing 19 beautiful colon to choose from. ul one-roo- Cholera and Limberneck Cause of Poultry Loss markable wall finish that is making It easy for home owner to decorate. Low cost th most st essy to apply tractlvs color combinations and ths lost wot J tn sanitation. Those srs tbe thing you A few TUB CHICAGO WHITE LEAD & OIL CO. 1 9 th 9t. sad 8. WmM A vw, Chlc. XU-- I!Wall Finish Dutributor Salt Lake Glass Salt Lake Gty, Utah "repetitious. Irrelevant, unnecessary, Impertinent, Improper and scandalous. Otherwise we believe he thought they were all right Arkansas Thomas Cat not on expense SSov r.toeEn As?e Pool? Qoadc CosttScag Yoee? . 5,000,000 of Americas 18,000,000 motor vehi des are recognized as an economic necessity on the farm. I3 your car giving the full efficiency of which it is capable and at the lowest cost per mile - hard-surface- d possible? Not if you are Jolting over bumps and ruts. Not if you get stuck in the mud. In addition to the time you thus lose along the way, you also pay from one to four cents a mile more in gasoline, tire and repair bills than you would pay on permanently paved highways. Improved Think, too, how many roads have gone to piecee within the past few years, thereby piling up huge maintenance and rebuilding costs. Contrast all this with the record of Concrete Roads the roads that have repair built out and maintenance built in. Firm, rigid and unyielding, free of bumps, ruts, holes, mud snd dust, they are, in every way, the most economical roads. Tell your highway officials you want more Concrete Roads. Such an investment will pay you big dividends year after year. so-call- ed French Highways Saved Country During Big War Scattered trees plumed promlscu-- . ously along the highway, hs one sees them In the forest, are more In keeping with the American mind than It is stately avenues of nionarchhs. rather lanes that we want, or pikes.' as they are culled lo the South, where trees seem to enjoy the roadside and each other's compuny. A lane or a pike Is tolerant even to the shy hut sweet violet that may he permitted t scatter Its perfums along tae highway f Permanent roads art a good investment g Scattered Trees on Roads lawyer In a New York breach-opromise suit declares that certain purts of his opponent's answer are A """ m France has 24,000 miles of national highways, 160.000 of departmental and intercommunicating highways, and 185,000 miles of parish or vicinal roads. The national highways approximate 6H per cent of France's highway system. There are running on the roads of France 300,000 motor cars, less than one per mile of road. The United States has 2.8S2.10S miles of roads, of which s tiny small fraction of 1 per cent might be denominated national highways by a stretch of the Imagination, which would Include ronds In national purks and on such reservations as the Canal tone and the District of Columbia under the term national highways." The United States has 13,000,000 motor cars running upon Its highways, or more than four per mile of road. Is there any really good reason why the United States should do less In transportation for its people than France? The paved highways of France saved that nation when nothing else could save her! Only the fuct that she could transport her armies, her ammunition, her supplies with rapidity and dispatch allowed her to stem the German attack. Hud she had such roads as we have, she would be today beneath the heel of the conqueror. It Is no argument to say we do not need national highways, because we are not neighbors to countries which might attack us. France did not build Hnd does not maintain her national highways merely for strategic reasons. She builds and maintains them for economic reasons. If thrifty France can find economy In the national highway Idea, why can not the United States find the same benefit In the same Idea? In Other Reipecte Wirelett Motion Picturet Motion pictures of a windmill iu action are said to have been projected, with the aid of radio, on a screen live miles away. The inventor, Mr. Francis Jenkins, predicts that his apparatus will be sufficiently refined In a year's time to make wireless motion pictures practical for commercial use. edu-entl- house-cleanin- Paint Co. 8C , s you all tbs bet about Concrete Roads, Includingth experienced other communities. Ask lot our ires booklet, K-Let us (iv PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION 111 West Washington Street CHICAGO s A National Organization to Improve and Extend the Uses of Concrete Officss ia 30 Citisi - linn l.VsauW , ubi I s Not Far Away 'w - Not Necessary . Mother foodstuffs allowed In the Til teach you to steal cookmails? No, dont, Well, we deliver a lot of ies in the pantry." Willie mother I I know bow already." mush, answered the postman. Am 1 hove heon too mttrh That which is called firmness In e occupied with things themselves to think either of king Is called obstinacy In a donkey. their beginning or their end. Goethe. Lord Ersklne. Children Cry FOR fl VAsi il MOTHER- :- Fletchers Castoria is especially prepared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food ; giving healthy and natural sleep. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Absolutely Harmless - No Opiates. Physicians everywhere recommend it. |