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Show PIUTE COUNTY NEWS, JUNCTION, UTAH Vaccination for Control of Roup Made of One of Most Serious Diseases of Fowls. Scientific (Prepared OKe KITCHEN CABINET Study by the United State ment of Agriculture.) Depart- i ((c), 1927 WMtiro NwtnDr Union ! We Hava no intellectual right to be ignorant when Information Ilea at our hand, and we have no spiritual right to ba weary when great moral Issue are at etake. Agnea Repplier. A scientific study of roup In poultry, one of the most serious fowl diseases, supports the conclusion that proper EVERYDAY FOODS vaccination Is one of the most effective means for reducing this source of The banana Is an everyday food, or loss. can be. for It Is always on the market The' study was conducted by Dr. Now that they are sold George W. Stiles and Dr. Hubert Bun-yeAk by the pound, one gets both of the bureau of animal Inwhat Is paid for. dustry, United States Department of This fruit Is so well In a recent scientific Agriculture. liked that It Is a favorite Vaccination and Medication paper, with most people. It Is for Control of Roup, Doctor Bunyea not a favorite only because of Its reports . the following conclusions, based on experiments: flavor, but excels many fruits In food value. Young Birds Susceptible. A simple little dessert which can be Birds about one year old appear to be more susceptible to roup than those quickly prepared Is made from two or two years old or older under the same three bananas pui through a rlcer conditions. adding a dash of lemon luice and a little sugar, not too much, or, the desThe use of antiseptics In the drinking water (permanganate of potash, sert will be cloying. Stir in whipped cream and have all well chilled. Serve and bichloride of mercury in particu' lar) does not appear to have any ap- with cookies. one-haUse Salad. Mixed Fruit preciable curative virtue and ;vefy little preventive property.. cupful each of siredded pineapple, The local external applicationof so- chopped iuts, orange pulp, grape fruit pulp, halved maraschipo cherries, lutions of meieurochrome or sliver trate Is not very effective in the pre- and one and one-hal- f cupfuls of diced bananas. Serve with any desired vention or treatment of roup. dressing Prevention of Disease. Butterfly Salad. Arrange slices of Bacterins prepared from the bacteria Involved in outbreaks of roup ap- pineapple cut Into halves on head letpear to be effective in the prevention tuce, the curved side toward the cenof the disease as well as the treatment ter, leaving a space between In which to put the body of the butterfly the of incipient cases, even under Two pineapple slices are the. wings. Make climatic conditions. a head of a green grape peeled, the kinds of bacterins have proved effective, one made from bacteria occur- feelers of finely cut green pepper. ring In a single outbreak and one Decorate the wings with slices of stuffed olives and pass the dressing from Infections In a number of outwhen serving. breaks. h Marquise Cake. Cream The progress of roup Is appreciably of of butter, add three-fourth- s cupful Influenced by secondary invaders, a cupful, of powdered sugar, two eggs, meaning bacteria which develop In addition to the chief virus that causes two bananas, one cupful of flour and the disease. The use of vaccination three teaspoonfuis of baking powder. In treating a considerable number of Cream the butter with the sugar, add the beaten eggs, then the mashed poultry flocks with roup gave very enpulp of the bananas and then the couraging results. flour sifted with the baking powder. Mix well and spread In hree tayei Wheat Protein Content tins, leaving the dough thinner in ths Bake twenty minutes. of Greater Importance center. Banana Croustadea. Cut Stale Protein content has become of insponge cake Into two-inc- h cubes, holcreasing Importance In determining low out to form a box, butter and the price paid for any particular lot of brown lightly In the oven. Fill with wheat. On occasions when the supply the d following: Cook cupful of high protein wheat has been less of seedless raisins In orange Juice unthan the demand, premiums of as til tender. Other fruit Juice may be much as a cent have been paid for used ; cut four bananas Into cubes and each added tenth of one per cent of add to the cooked raisins with half a protein over a given basic amount cupful of sugar. Cover and cook until Protein tests by different chemists thoroughly hot. shaking the dish to often do not agree within one tenth keep the contents from scorching. Fill of one per cent even when the ability the croustades with the fruit and pour and conscientiousness of the chemist the over the whole., Serve hot sirup are beyond question, with the result A Symphony of Soups. that numerous complaints are heard On a ctiiljy night in any season of regarding the making of protein tests the year a dish of hot soup Is much on wheat. , If the enjoyed. To determine how jelose different meal to follow Is laboratories should be able to a substantial one, report protein results on the same the soup should be sample of wheat as well as to light and merely explain why these variations occur, stimulating, with was the object of investigations rebut little nourishported In Department of Agriculture ment. If the meal Bulletin No. 1460-D- , Testing . Wheat Is a light one, the for Protein with a Recommended soup provided Method for Making the Test should be a cream soup, bisque or a The sources of error which occur In chowder. making protein tests have been careMushroom Soup. Cut Into dice one fully studied and as a result a standand one-hacupfuls of fresh mushard procedure Is recommended to elimrooms. Stew until tender In a cupful inate these errors. Suggestions are of beef stock, then add a quart of beef given also regarding how close Indestock, thicken with a tablespoonful of should agree flour rubbed smooth with a tablespoonpendent laboratories when making protein tests. ful of butter. Season with salt, pepper A copy of the bulletin may be oband minced parsley. tained by writing the United States Chicken Soup. Crush the bones of Department of Agriculture, Washinga chicken left from a roast, add any ton, D. C. leftover bits of meat, a stalk or two of celery finely cut, a pinch of poultry seasoning, salt nnd pepper, cover with cold wnter and bring to the simmering jj point. Simmer for several hours, strain and season to taste. Thicken with butter and flour cooked together Test your seed dont guess. and serve with a little cream added at the last or a egg stirred In A test In time may save a bushel Just before serving. In nine. Test your seed corn. ' Soup a la Clermont. Take the upThe best way to economize In man per crust of a loaf of French bread, and horse labor is to keep them busy. cut Into small pieces, remove the crumbs and put Into a howl with two Lime is required as a plant food by cupfuls of seasoned stock. Place In a all crops. Some crops require more moderate oven for half an hour. Slice four large onions, fry brown In two than others. tablespoonfuls of butter, drain hiiJI boll for twenty minutes In beef stock like Plants, animals, must be well to cover for twenty minutes. Add the fed if they are to pay for onions nnd the bread to two quarts of and .cost of growing them. hot beef stock. Pour Into a tureen, and serve, with grnted cheese. Lime promotes the decay of vegeLiver Soup. Take one-hapound table matter in the soil and thus aids of cold cooked liver; grind it. Fry one in the formation of humus. large onion In two tablespoonfuls of then add the liver. Add a cupCompetition may be the life of butter, ful of sifted bread crumbs, season well trade, but will certainly with salt and pepper and add six cupadd vigor to the life of farming. fuls of soup stock. Boil fifteen mina colander and Lime, by sweetening the acid soil, utes, press through with one thicken Just before egg. favors the growth of most legumes, ; serving. such as clover, alfalfa, and peas. '. Bean Soup. Put Into a soup kettle two cupfuls of baked beans, two cup Potatoes, whether for seed or eatfuls of canned tomatoes, an onion ing purposes, should be stored at fine and six cupfuls of cold temperatures of not more than 40 chopped water. Simmer until the beans are degrees Fahrenheit soft enough to rub through a sieve, season and serve. Keep after the weeds, as this Is reheat, Combination Soup. Put Into a soup very Important, especially when the a ham bone, a beef hone, and a vegetable and flower plants are kettle of red pepper with two cupfuls n pod young. Cultivate often and good. spilt peas. Cover with cold water and Remember when we used to think simmer until the peas are soft. Re that alfalfa wasnt a safe feed for move the bones, season and serve horses that It caused heaves and overworked the kidneys? The Idea has been pretty well exploded. a, delicate lf ! unfa-vorab- ft By ELMO 8COTT WATSON PRIL 27 of this year marks the one hundred fifth anniversary of ' Ml the birth of a remarkable Amer-leaHa Is remarkable In,, the sense that his life story Is the ' paradox of a failure who suetimes. ceeded, not once, but many author of W. E. Woodward, George Washington : The Image and the Man, recently announced that he Is at work on the reconstruction of another great American historical figure, Gen. Ulysses S. Grant" From other statements of his It Is evident that he Is approaching his subject from the successful failure" angle. Grants career was one of the' most dramatic In our history, he says. At the age of thirty-eighe was an obscure and beaten man, sitting silently around the stove in a country store. His opportunities were all apparently behind him. He , had left the army under the charge of drunkenness and had found himself unable to make a living In business. Who would have dreamed, at the beginning of the Civil war, that this seedy, discouraged failure was to become the great leader of the Union armies and to be President for two one-fourt- n. ht d4pr. us. gRAzrt zz: one-thir- ltage and carried on the tradition of military service by successive generations of Grants. After the Revolution Noah' Grant emigrated to Pennsylvania' and in 1709 he continued westward to .Ohio. General Grant has recorded In his memoirs that Noah Grant was not thrifty In the way of laying up stores on earth" and financial reverses as well as the death of his wife In 1805 broke up the family. Jesse Grant, the father of ierms?" the future President, was given a home by Judge It is because Grants career was a dramatic one Tod of Ohio and he remained with Tod until he mnd because his life story has In It so many was old enough to learn a trade and strike out dramatic elements that he Is such an Interesting for himself, figure. There la the farm boy who became PresiAt Ravenna, Ohio, Jesse Grant established a dent" element and, despite the failures In his and later moved to Point Pleasant, Clertannery career, It has. In its general outlines, all the elemont county, Ohio. There, on April 22, 1822, a ments of the success story" of which Americans son was born and given the name of Hiram seem to be particularly fond. As a military genius Ulysses. Grant was appointed to West Point In It Is doubtful If he was the equal of half a dozen 1839 and it was at that time that Hiram Ulysses other generals In the Union and Confederate became "Ulysses Simpson." In the course of makarmies. But Grant, the soldier, was a picturesque ing the appointment, Congressman Hamer of Ohio character and it Is easy to understand how the was obliged to give the full name of his protege. picture of this stocky, dark, taciturn man, chewKnowing that the boys name was Ulysses and to the would appeal Ing upon the Inevitable cigar, his mothers maiden name was Simpson, at a Imagination of a people so soon to become wedded venture he wrote It down Ulysses Simpson to a gospel of efficiency and a tradition intensiGrant." And so It remained through the remainder fied, albeit, by the movies of a strong, silent of Grants life. While his .career at the military man" as an Ideal. academy cannot be called a failure, at least It" Then there Is the matter of epigrammatic utterwas far from a success. The fact that. his classance. We Americans are fond of laconic speech, mates distorted Ulysses" into Useless" has some catch-wordof our great sayings by great men, significance. Except for his superior horsemanslogans and the like. So why should we not ship, and proficiency In mathematics, he was never remember the man who said Letus have peace I" squarely at either end of the class, front nor rear. and whose brief unconditional surrender" mes- Mediocrity Is perhaps the most fitting phaJacterlza-tlsage to the general of an opposing army could of Grant, the- West Pointer, His class stand by an identity of Initials, make It easy to read was so low that he served his fourth year as Ing or ' a U. S. Grant" as Ulysses Simpson Grant" private and at the age of ttventy-on- e he was United Surrender Grant" or Unconditional with a ranking of 21 In a dass of 89. graduated States Grant" One other element Is the fairt that , His Interest in horses, both as a boy In Ohio the manner of his becoming President followed and as a cadet at West Point, had crystallized Into . was historic tradition so. closely. The tradition a desire to obtain a commission In the cavalry established when .the new Republic ' made the upon graduation; Instead he was appointed a victorious George Washington its first President. second lieutenant In the Fourth Infantry. If this The tradition was perpetuated after the war of was not Grants first failure," It was at least his to Andrew 1812 In the gift of the Presidency first frustration, which is so nearly the same Jackson, hero of the Battle of New Orleans, and, thing. lie was ordered to Jefferson barracks In " Old a little later to William Henry Harrison, the Missouri and while there hts dissatisfaction with Tippecanoe" hero of another battle in 'that conlife became so pronounced that he deterarmy flict Zachary Taylor, the Qld Rough and Ready" mined to resign and seek a ' professorship , In of Mexican war fame, was similarly rewarded mathematics In' some college. He applied for an by his country. So why should not the victorious appointment as assistant professor of mathe" general of the war between' the states be elematics at West Point, but again he was frustrated. vated to the Presidency as soon as the opportunity There was no such position open then. Before one offered? That question was answered n 1808 occurred, the Mexican war broke out and Grant President-Grant. . when General Grant became was a soldier on active Instead of academic Grant, the' President Is rather a dim, vague service. And this young lieutenant, fed up" on who figure In our minds.' It is Grant the soldier, garrison life and seeking an escape, was the man two 300 words those, for and years Is remembered, who a few years later was to become commander have been synonymous. Ulysses Simpson Grant, of the greatest army ever assembled on Araer- was eighth In descent from- - Matthew Grant, lean soil and the first American officer to be sur1630 was In and who came to Massachusetts given the rank of general--; after that grade was veyor of Connecticut for more .than , forty years. created by act of congress ! v of evidence the fact Although there Is no direct During the Mexican war Grant was promoted a Matthew Grant had that not Is part unlikely It to first lieutenant for gallantry at the battle of In the Indian wars In New England and thus Molino del Itey and brevetted captain for his conestablished .the line of military Grants. At any duct at. Chapultepec. In 1853 he was commls-'- . out Noah early for rate the soldier strain cropped a captain, but by this time' he was consloned and Solomon Grant, Ulysses vinced that he could not support his family on a coramlsheld British ; Grant his captains pay. etons during the Seven Years or French and So In 1S54, much to the consternation of 'his' ' In (1756-1763were both and killed Indian .war and his friends, he resigned from the army. family the same campaign. Noah Grant, his grandfather, words of one biographer: In the . In the Continental Joined a Connecticut company van years of Grant's life were any-thinext The army and served throughout the Revolution from but rosy and satisfactory.' Having a wife ' Yorktown. to. Bunker hill and child to support, it was necessary to get to' work as Quickly as. possible after quitting:, the Whether or not a Grant of this line served In army. His father-in-lahelped him out byjput- -' the War of 1812 is not recorded, but Ulysses S. him on a small farm he owned in Missouri ting In the Mexican war and the served who Grant Here Grant plowed and'hafrowed. fed and curried his horses; butlt, with his own hands, a log house for Ovtl war, his son, Gen. Frederick Dent Grant who his family; out down trees, and converted them served la the Indian campaigns. In the Spanlsh-Amerlca- n into cordwood, and then hauled It to the nearest " In the and his and Philippines, war, village where he tramped around the town hunt- III, who served grandson, Capt Ulysses Grant Ing up customers, who usually purchased. on credlb which proved eternal. Upon these wood- gq the World war, were true to their soldier hers, n . ' ; great-grandfathe- r, great-granduncl- .) w hauling trlpa, the man who later became th greatest military figure of the world, and President of the United States, was dressed in a very shabby old felt hat, a patohed blouse coat, and pants shoved in the tops of ths boots that had seen much wear. Not to make a living being ab)e at farming and wood cutting, Grant next tried his hand in an endeavor to sell real estate and col- lect rents in St. Louis. This venture was no more successful than the previous one. From SL Louis he moved to Galena, 11L, where he became a clerk in a leather and hardware store owned by his father. Thus a failure as a farmer and a business man was added to his record. The opening guns of the Civil war brought him out of Jils obscurity, but again he seemed destined to failure. He offered his services to the government, but, despite his West Point training and his Mexican war record, no one In authority paid much attention to him. Finally Governor Yates of Illinois offered him the colonelcy of the Twenty-firs- t regiment of Rllnols Infantry, and on June command of that regiment. From then on 'his rise was rapid until the end came at Appomattox, and, as the successful general In one of the greatest conflicts the world has ever known, ' he reached one of his greatest triumphs. If Grant, the soldier, was a great success. Grant, the politician, was equally a great failure. His two terms as President proved that. Although there was much that was commendable in his record as the Chief Executive, In the memory of most Americans this Is overshadowed by the scandals, resulting from misplaced confidence In his friends, which marred his eight years in the White House. But through it all Grant, the man, emerged with reputation unsullied. From this failure he went to the second great triumph of his life his trip around the world during which he was honored by other nations as few men before or since have been honored. He returned to this country In 1880 to find his name proposed as a candidate for the Republican nomination for President and he was not an unwilling candidate. During the exciting days of the Republican convention the greatness of Grant, the man, and the weakness .of Grant, the politician, flashed forth again. There was a deadlock with neither Grant, Blaine, Sherman nor Garfield able to muster enough votes to get the nomination. Then the Sherman supporters proposed to throw their strength to Grant If be would agree to make Sherman a member of his cabinet. This was Grants , reply, It was my intention, If nominated and elected, to appoint ' John Sherman secretary of the treasury. Now you may be certain that I shall not Not to be President of the United States would I consent that a bargain should be made." So James A. ' Garfield became the nominee and President He was destined to know one more failure and one more triumph before the end of his career. He became a partner in a business firm which failed and he was left almost penniless. The country came to his rescue and congress, by a him on the special enactment In 1884, placed retired list of the army, as general with full pay a position he had resigned to become President Urged thereto by enterprising editors, he set about the task of writing his memoirs, the sale of which he hoped would take care of his family. With the shadow of death hovering over him he persisted In his work and finished It. a few days before the end came. He died July 23, 1885. The magnificent tomb In Riverside park. New York city, is more than the last resting place of Ulysses Simpson Grant general and President It Is a national shrine, symbolical of American genius for succeeding through failure. ' 15, 1861, he assumed lf EKKKOHKoa j Agricultural Facts Well-beate- n . '1 the1-labo- r lf |