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Show . T1IE SPANISH FORK PRESS. SPANISH FORK. CTAIt MIIH " Boy, 13, Proves Self' Champion Detective ;; THE I KITCHEN CABINET ; ; ! (S, CLEAN HOUSE IS' FIRST ESSENTIAL Wntm A clean house la the first essential In good poultry management. The cleaning should be done before the pullets are put In the bouse for the winter, according to John Vundervort of the University of Illinois. Clean, healthy pullets cannot be expected to remain so If they are placed In a filthy ben house which Is likely to harbor worm eggs and disease germs, be points out. Nests, roosts, water dishes and other utensils should be taken out of the house and cleaned and then left In the sunlight Dropping boards should be cleaned and aU litter and manure scraped from the floor. The floors, sidewalks and celling should then be swept after which of the house should be thoroughly scrubbed with hot water containing lye afthe rate of one pound to 40 gallons of wuter. No disinfecting should be done until after the house has been thoroughly cleaned and allowed to dry out The final step Includes replacing the fixtures and putting clean litter on the floor and material In the nests. Ilouses should be cleaned and fresh material put In the nests monthly." Preparing for Eggs in Cold Weather of Winter With the coming of colder weather and the necessity of getting the pul .lets Into winter .quarters, poultry flock owners again are confronted with the matter of which ones to keep. Pullets should be well grown .and healthy. Pullets that are undersized or stunted are seldom If ever worthy of their feed. The balance of the flock between hens and pullets will be determined by Conditions such us. the number of pullets available. The average Is about s old pullets and hens, the pullets being kept for winter egg production and the hens for breeding stock. As Insurance against an outbreak of colds and disease In the poultry flock, good housing and proper management of the flock are better and more reliable than vaccination or any other medical treatment. Providing plenty of room In the poultry bouse Is necessary to the health and productivity of the flock. Three to four square feet Is the proper amount of floor space for each bird. one-thir- d Prevent Fall Troubles in Farm Poultry Flock Newspaper lAttos.) ; Tha farm has produced many ot the great teachers, thinkers, poets, and preachers of the world. There must bs a reason for It. SOMETHING . two-third- 1927, by ' The French have attained a mark In the preparation of sauces. A perfect sauce Is a thing ot surprising delicacy and only he who hus the most sensitive taste can ever achieve such perfection. There Is always tn the kitchen of a good cook the pot of stock made from the liquor from the cans of mushrooms,. or their trimmings, bits of fowl that are trimmed In the dressing, vegetables and other meats as well This sou p pot is the basis for hundreds of sauces. Crushed bones of veal, lamb, beef, ham bones, are all good material for sauces. The basic sauces are the white and brown, the latter called espagnole. Espagnole.1 Take chopped .calves' feet and veal bones, crush with tie trimmings from uncooked ham, cut Into small pieces, chopped carrots, leeks, onions, celery, parsley roots, salt, pepper cloves, bay leaves and thyme, Ml put Into a roasting pan, spread with sweet fat to prevent burning and roast In a hot oven until a Stir until all are golden brown. browned, then sprinkle with flour and brown lightly. Remove to a saucepan, cover with cold water and simmer for six hours on the back of the stove. Strain and reduce by simmering three more hours, skimming during the cooking. I'luce this rich sauce essence In the ice box to be used as required. Such a sauce has flavor and character which can be found In none made In ten minutes and seasoned with bottled flavors. The French, In making white sauce, use half chicken fat and half butter; this gives that delightful flavor so well liked. When the fat Is bubbling the flour Js added, then blended with the milk, hot. Cook for 13 minutes over water after It has been cooked until thick. Sauces are thickened fluids, flavored with vegetables, savored with the stock of meat bones and seasoned with condiments and herbs. The fluid may be stock milk, vegetable juices such as strained tomato or mushroom liquor, and thickening such as flour, starch, arrowroot, egg yolks or. In cold sauces, oil and gelatin are used for thickening. Favorite Dishes. Our Welsh friends are v.ery fond of the following very tasty soup; Buttermilk Soup. Ileut two quarts of buttermilk to the boiling point. One of the most common diseases of the poultry flock during the autumn Is roup. This disense Is often found In damp, poorly ventilated houses and Is most often contracted by birds that are poorly developed and of low viMix three tality. Fowls of. this type frequently of flour get roup and are the means of spreadwith three well ing it throughout the flock. Obviously, beaten eggs; when prevention should consist of eliminatsmooth, add a liting the weaklings from the flock and tle of the hot butproviding a house that will be dry and termilk and stir It gradually Into the free Jrora .drafts, but well ventilated. hot soup. Cook at simmering point An additional prevention against until the flour Is cooked, then, let this disease Is the following: Add as boll up once; add butter and serve much potassium permungnnute as will with a bit of sugar. remain on the surface of a dime to Court Bouilltfn. Take four quarts each gallon of drinking water and one onion, one slice of carof kep before the fowls. This acts as an rot,water, two cloves, two tablespoonfuls of and will to the antiseptic help keep birds in good condition. An attempt to salt, one tenspoonful of pepper, one cure the Individual of roup Is not ad- tablespoonful of vinegar, the juice of half a lemon and bouquet of herbs. visable, for, although In the majority of cases there may be an apparent Tie the onion, carrot and herbs In of muslin and put Into the cure, the dunger of reinfection Is great piece with the other Ingredients. water and frequently such birds cause the disease to spread throughout the flock. Cover and simmer for one hour. Now add any flsh to be boiled, tied In a thin cheesecloth to keep It from breaking. Tills gives a fine flavor to Dont Wash Eggs boiled fish. Serve with' any desired experienced egg packers condemn fish sance such as: the practice of washing eggs with Hot Sauce Tartars. To one-hal- f either water or vinegar, most severely d because such eggs do not stand up In cupful of white suuc-- add storage. The fact that the eggs thus of a cupful of mayonnaise, one-hal- f chopped capers, treated cannot be detected allows tahlespoonful each many of them to go Into storage with pickles, olives and parsley; ad one-haone-half shallot chopped and teathe result that when they are taken out of the coolers next fall and win- spoonful of vinegar. Stir until the ter their poor quality will result In mixture Is thoroughly heated but. do lessened consumption. So don't wash not cook to the boiling point. Serve hot eggs for sale. National Poultry, Butter and Egg Bulletin. Hot Chicken $alad. Mix one pint of cooked chicken cut Into cubes, one teacupful of peas cooked, one-hal- f Teach Chicks to Roost spoonful of onion Juice, one pimento Many people make a mistake In cut Into small squares, one teaspoonful not teaching the young chickens to of lemon juice; blend well and set roost. It Is usually advisable to do aside for an hour oi two. Make a this w'len the chicks are from eight sauce of h cupful each of to ten weeks of age. When they are flour and butter, f teaspoonful allowed to sit on the floor It Is dlfll- - of salt and a cupful ench of chlckea cult to keep them clean and there I stock and cream. Add the seasoned Is a tendency for them to crowd on Ingredients and let stand over hot cold nights, which often resolu tn water until well heated through. lass. The cnlcks can nsualiy be Serve from a dialling dish or on hot taught to roost by putting perches buttered toast close to the floor and placing one or Baked Tongue. Put a fresh tongue two old hens with them. . In a kettle, cover with boiling water salted, and let cook slowly for two Whitewash Formula hours or until tender enough t.o peel Here Is a standard formula for ex- off the skin. Slice a small onion and terior whitewash which has been found brown In a tahlespoonful of butter, f cupful each of carrot Dissolve 12 pounds of odd satisfactory. salt and 0 ounces of powdered ilium and celery cut Into bits, stir until well mixed, then turn Into the roastIn about 4.gullons of hot water. Add 1 quart of molasses. Make a thick ing pnn, lay In the tongue and pour cream by thoroughly mixing 50 pounds over five cupfuls of the liquor In (1 sack) of hydrated lime, or 88 which tho tongue was cooked. Season pounds (',4 bushel) of quicklime, thor- with salt and popper, cover and bnke oughly slaked and screened before use for two hours In a moderate oven. with about 7 gallons of hot water. Add the dear solution to the lime 'IfVcLO-trcML t stirring vigorous!. table-spoonfu- ls ' one-thir- lf one-hnl- ' one-hal- . ! ; ; ! near perfection s !! I ABOUT SAUCES one-fourt- ! !! ; j ! ! !! ; . " !! ! 1 ; .. : ; . X ; ; 111 H--- -l- Detroit. arrests Mich. In : Twenty-thre- Gentlemen Change Sometimes A 2. e just three days Is a record any experienced deteo-tlve, wise In the wnys of the 1! lawbreaker, might covet. To a lad of thirteen years who sel- dmn meets violators outside of story books such a record Is at tallied only In the wildest of , ,, dreams, Jack W, Wordon, thirteen years ! ! old, refused to be daunted by precedent, and In three days 11 caused the arrest and conviction of nineteen Highland Purk mer- chants for selling meat on Sun- - ; ; day and four peddlers for giving short weight. I! Jack declares he Inherited his sleuthing ability from his father, 1 John V. Wordon, who for tlilr- teen year has served the city ot Highland Park as a policeman. Worden, now a captain and senior of weights and measures, ) gave Jack his chance to search for lawbreakers and Jack made 11 good In short order. All of the merchants arrested 1 on the evidence gathered by Jack- - were eonvlcted and fined from $5 to $23 ench. ; ; 1 " MARRIAGE HOAX ENDS BY SUICIDE Pitiful Drama of a Wife of a Few Days . i M. WILLIAMS By MARTHA r- - - -- II (Copyright.) tl1 SHALL marry, of course but not until I And the woman to suit," Gardner declared loftily, rising tiptoe, then coming down hurd on Ids heels by way of oinphusls. "I wonder what sort that Is?" Sarah-Ancommented reflectively, twinkling POST TOASTIES n wickedly corn withal. "nol-prosse- d" mail-orde- Girl Bride Spurns Mother on Street Fitman, N. J. A girl bride of fifteen chose to stick to her husband cf a day rather than return to her mother, who met the elopers In a dramatis street scene on Broadway. The principals are Lawrence Ree-metwenty-seve- n years old, and his wife, formerly Marlon Stowe, fifteen years old, and the latters mother, Mrs. Marlon U. Stowe. Reerael and the girl tried to elopi to Elkton. They failed, but went to l.'hpstertown, "Md., and had the knot tied. Mrs. Stowe threatened to have Re mel arrested. She traced the pair t Woodbury. They were not there when Mrs. Stowe arrived and she .continued on to Pitman, where the couple came to stay with friends. t "I love you dearly," Exclaimed as she embraced her daughter. "Come home with me." The girl bride wept She said she loved her mother, but that she lovitd her husband, too. "Tou'll have to make your choice between blm and me," declared Mrs , Stowe. "Ill stay with Lawrence," sobbocl the bride. !, Swarm of Bees Gives Horse a Merry Cham BerUn. A swarm of bees tried ft cluster on the tall of a horse to a tight otatcher wugon In front of a butcher shop here. Tin horse proceeded to entertain an excited but helpless mob for at lean: ten minutes with some samples off ( wild-webucking. The frantic animal succeeded In freeing Itself of the wagon and galloped madly down the avenue. Meanwhile the fire brigade was called 'out. It started In hot pursuit with the hose assiduously spraying the horse's hindquarters whenever the spraying was good. After the chase continued for half a mile the bees were driven away and the completely exhausted horse was corralled. hav-nesse- ... Wltkesharre, Pa. A wife who attends public dances against the wishes of her husbwid need not be supported by her husband. Judge Fine ruled In the Domestic Relations court. - Parson Fined Carlisle, Ark. Rev. II. Owens hits been fined $3 oti a charge of whipdaughter for ping tils slxteen year-oltalking to John Lowe, to whom she d was secretly married. "X in milk or cream crisp v wv. ootfv.-- sv '"fr t & :: fS'TOfc-:- til , ingly. : : ' A A Z Surah-Ainodded carelessly. Jimwusu't a bad sort, my, her except for his conceit She got up say-- . Ing: "Suppose we appoint today s year for confessing? Our sins, our loves, our mistakes, our deeds, good and had?" fee, Tl - V (4 m & & So much crisper Next minute he saw her galloping down the ragged drive; waving her cup high above her head. It angered him she knew how he hated tomboys and their works. Neither sister, wife nor daughter of his should Indulge In anything so crude. Jluuny, born with an Indoor complex as beflttcd his fine estate, hated hunting and tmrely tolerated horse shows. Yet, somehow he couldn't keep away and Blue from them when Snrnh-AnJeans, her favorite blue roan, led the these deliciously seasoned corn flakes Made from the tender hearts of white corn, ex quisitely seasoned, Post Toastieshavethe true delicate flavor of the edrn. This unequalcd flavor is sealed in lasting crispness by a special toastingjpro-ccs- s of the Postum Company. Order a package of these refreshing corn flakes from your grocer. entries. What a girl she would be If only he could make her over I The pity of it was that she wouldnt be thus remade. He said os much to young Preston, Ids visiting college pinte, before risking him within Sarah-Ann- s orbit. The encounter went through with bells on to Gardners delight Preston didnt talk much, unless you noticed his eyes. Ills stay was brief before the last good by he asked Jimmy airily: "llow many deep is Cousin Sarah-Anengaged?" Assured that was something no fellow had yet found out he went off laugh- Note how the golden flakes crackle as you pour them into the bowl. Now add milk or cream and taste theircrispflavor and oodness. Ask by name the or Post Toasties corn flakes that stay crisp in milk or cream. They come ready to serve from the red and yellow, package. wax-wrapp- r. C.. oc. POSTUM COMPANY, INC., BATTLE ed 1927, n - , CREEK, MICH. If two men are arguing bitterly and put In your oar,! A man may do a great hulk of the work, but It Is responsibility that counts. you feel a desire to go away. With the motor at the rear Instead of Jn the front, a German nuto affords the driver a less obstructed view of the road. In. Berlin, Germany, Lightning struck a monument erected In memory of a family that was destroyed by lightning In 1808. ing. The day of confession still lay six months abend. Cardner found himself wishing It were at hand, but dared not say so. He realized that Surnh-Angrew steadily more daring, more altogether delightful. As to Preston she was merely Judicial, saying with her best twinkle : "Decision reserved." So he almost ran to her after Prestons letter came. It said: "Im mnrrylng shortly dont know Just when. My girl, confound her, refuses to set the day until sure It will be lucky. You'll see us In the honeymoon know you'll like her, and hope, between us, we can make her like you. nere's hopin' to find the latchstring out and broilers sinfully plenty but don't go planning all on the dead quiet any blow-ou- t until you see me." "You don't seem a bit surprised, Gardner was almost plaintive. Sarah-An- n smiled and nodded. "Because I am not," she said. "I knew told me right at he was engaged-- he the first In such a funny way you know we three went riding and he kept looking, looking at Blue Jeans until I bad to say something it was 'I think yon want my horse but you can't have him.' 'Ob! I must' he said. T need him for my wife only creature Ive ever seen that Just suited her.' Then I asked was he married he said,. no,. only engaged he had come down here to find out how comfortably he could live without her. That stopped the but made me like him all the better. I hope he Is going to vet happy." "I'll tell him so know It will pleass him," Gardner bubbled. Sarah-Ananswered: "Maybe so," and changed the subject Gardner felt hnrt at her Indifference, and said : "See here. You must be nice to the bride." "I shall be If she behaves real nice," qnoth Sarah-Anrising, to add: "Can't talk longer now got to be fitted for a new dress." Jimmy did not see her again until three days latqr then a gorgeous new limousine disgorged upon bis doorstep a wholly radiant Preston and a slim something so veiled and swathed It. appeared wholly strange. Preston thrust It almost violently into Gardners arms, bubbling out: "Kiss her, Jimmy, I wont mind. Were old mar rted folks now got the knot Ued an hour ago in town." Then out of veils and swnthlngs burst the surprise of Gardners life a happily chuckling Sarah-Ann- , who kissed him on both cheeks, then full on the mouth, "This saves confessing," she said, "I knew Dan Preston for giggling. my man the minute I set eyes on him. He truly was engaged elsewhere but seeing me on Blue Jeans put the girl he left behind him In the discard. Her pictures mighty pretty, and shes convent-breand rich and a lady. Just the wife for you, Jimmy you aro. going home with us to see for your n Mm M $1 a Room is tU it costs to get the new, popular one and two-ton-stipple effects with King Wall Finish r defer or writs I RCB Color Chat Aitl-t-n- fo tod cunpfeto dmcuoas. The Chiaso Whitt Leod St oa Co!, 1 Sth S(. Sc S. Western An. Chsmro, 111 Wall Finish DISTRIBUTOR SALT LAKE GLASS & PAINT CO. cut v Avn Huge Statue of Washington argument has resulted from th mistaken notion that the government fixed the maximum or the minimum price of wheat at $2.2! a bushel during the World war. This was the basic rather than the maximum prlee. cents wasc Two dollars and twenty-siguaranteed for all wheat of a certain grade at a certain plnce. The actual price was usually lower or higher, depending on the grade of the wheat and Its location. rutlifindcr Magazine. Tourists entering the state of Washington through any one of the four princlpu! roads leading to the commonwealth will be welcomed a huge statue of the first President mounted on a pedestal 40 feet high, according to Popular Mechanics Magazine, Officially, Washington Is the only state in the Union entitled to use such an emblem. The model Is being prepared by Alonzo Victor Lewis, a Seattle sculptor. Bartered Wealth Kind Old Lady Surely a strong man like you could get a Job la some business. Hobo What, and sacrifice my career? Boston Transcript. x n rrrATi tv War Price of Wheat Much Ambitious "Her rich uncle cut her off with practically nothing." "Ah, a sort of bobbed heiress.". Hardware Age. - and INSIST 1 Unless you see the Bayer Cross on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 25 years. self" "Who says so?" Gardner demanded. "Both of us," cried the hcwlweds In unison. "Hop In and come right along clothes can be sent after besides, youll shortly need spnndy-neones." Who could gainsay such command? Nobody. Jlmmx didnt try lt At last accounts life ran blissfully for him aid seemed likely to do so to Utf end BAYER ASPIRIN SAY d Favors Husband fakes that stay "Not your sort I You can give any odds you please ou that," from the gentleman. "Luckily, that goes without saying. I can't Imagine worse luck than marrying you myself." "Ilence we are agreed to agree which Is much harder than agreeing to disagree," from Gardner patroniz- n Birmingham, Ala. In the 'office of the clerk of the northern division of the United States court of Alabama, at Birmingham, the word is written after the name of Mrs. Mary Rhodes Elliot on the court docket. In the writing of this word the story .of a pitiful drama of a wife of a few days Is told. Mrs. Elliot was arrested some time since, chnrged with using the United States mails to defraud. Shortly after her arrest she committed suicide. All the pathos of a blighted life had been hers. Born a hopeless cripple, no man had ever loved her enough to ask her to be his wife. Then she advertised In a magazine for a husband: "A southern girl with $30,000 needs only to share her wealth to make her happy." To possess the luxurious articles which a girl with this much money would own, she orr dered them from a house. Donald E. Elliot, answered her advertisement and married her, after he visited her at her home at Arab, Ala. Soon afterward 6he took her own life. To her husband she left a note of farewell. This Is filed In the office of the clerk of the Federal court In Birmingham, along with the indictment agalhst her. t tOHjTAKy, Ask for DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART Bayer package .Accept only which contains proven directions.' I AjQtrla la U trad ntrk tt ITnndv "Rayer" boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 4 and 100 Druggists. Uanufsetort sf UunosttUctclihitcr t BtllcjUndil |