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Show - Saturday, October 21. 1925. TOE JOURNAL. LOGAN CITY. 14 WITH THE SCOUTS ON THE & LONG TRAIL heat'funn'he i And Cheese Heart To e.ne tablespoon melted loiter, add two tablespoons of hopped onion and eiok two mnutes. Add a fourth pound of inned American chee', rubbed hrough grater, a cup of chop-- , ood English walnuts or l ci umbs, a cup of cup of milk, juice of half a lem-- j on, salt, pepper, paprika. Put in shallow baking dish, sprinkle some bread crumbs over the top, and brown in a moderate oven. Pimento Cheese Roast Drain liquid from cups of canned lima beans, run through a meat chopper, mix with half a pound of tinned pimento cheese, rubbed through giater, cut two canned pimentoes very fine and add them and season-inBeat an egg slightly, and add enough of three cups of bread crumbs to make a mixture roll. Roll this in the ie.st of the, bread crumbs, .nd bake m a moderate oven until brown basting with milted butler and tomato' water. Serve with pea-iutq- - WANTS INFORMATION Scout Exe utive Lindblad has received a letter from M. ,L Gross of the publicity department of the Boy Scouts of America asking that this council furnish information concerning Councr scouts activitiees in the Cache Valley beet fields with a view- to its publication in one of the leading magazines of the American sugar trade, Sugar." An aiticlo of approximately two thousand words, based on published summaries for 1923, 1924 and 1925, and accompanied with photographs, has been sent direct to the magazine mentioned. The article contains a brief summary of all the Councils work in the beet fields. Some amazing statistics are included: for instance, there were eleven hundred scouts placed by the council in the beet fields in 1923. Their earnings were about a quarter of sa million dollars. An equal number of boys wete placed in 1921 and this year has seen as many scouts wanking in this major Cache Valley industry. How the scouts were organized for the work how they were kept healthy and happy, how the movement originated, and how it has succeeded, form the burden of the story. In hus summary the scout executive has pointed out that scouts who worked in th ebeets actually gained in weight vover the boys who did not; that they were actually in better health after the beet work than they were before; and finally that hoys were excused for a number of days from school in order to work ip the beet fields made better grades than boys who did not work-ithe beets. In writing. for this information National Scout Headquarters has indicated that the Cache Valley Council is cai rying on ne of the most extensive and surprising good turns in scouring. - n BOYS' LfFE - Roadster . 77 Touring Car tOXg a Coach . . logs (Old Price $1091) Landau (Old Price 1095) Sedan (Old Price 1215) Landau Coup, . . Sedan tuts (Old (Old lift t95 (Old Price $1295) Price 1545) Price 1645) AU prices at factory- - Genera! Motors Time Puyricnf Kates, heretofore the (ouit m the ite 4usuHavc been rnsJe stiU Jotter Y ou utn mm uvc a n.m h as $ 4tto $60 n yoar time payment cestto j CR A WSII AW REESE MOTOR CO. Logan, Utah 30 South Main -- i Take one can meduim size teas, heat them in their own liquor, drain and pour into a shallow baking dish. A(jd salt and pepper, then break four gsrs over the peas, dot with bits if butter and' bake ten minutes lifer g. , i hot oven. hcese And Spinach rimhales Chop very fine two cups of snnod spinach. Beat yolks of three eggs, and add two thirds up of milk, two tablespoons of nelted butter, half pound of tinned American cheese, rubbed hrough grater, half a teaspoon if salt, and stir while heating. Mix halfof this cheese sauce vith the spinach and fold in n The Landau Coupe WINNING Baked Beans With Tcmatoes Chop one onion. Take a No. 2 size can of baked beajs, and a No. 1 size can of tomatoes, and place them in layers in a bakin' dish, sprinkling each layer vith the onion. Bake twenty minutes in a moderate ovan. AND HOLDING WILL GOOD OAKLAND SIX sauce. j PRODUCT OF GENERAL MOTORS , WEEKLY LONDON LETTER flaunt figures issued by thoj eret sen ice men. Consequently lie winning nightly applause in more than before the war, owing TO THE JOURNAL United States averagejnan whcnlHb chief of the presid numerous music halls, but the chiefly to the low pricesof wine" spends just about $7aa year om service was tran- - Thalic theatie is now presenting imported from countries in (Continued From Page Seven) dress and the axerage woman entia! functions. M.i Anne Marie at the Grosse to other which the currencies have desferred A the choir members, said she aliout $70. Marie, Marie is preciated, such as France. hoped devoutly that auspeilhtus, Oct 24 After nearly PARIS and the other singers thought built By the he would not be replaced He; the chief musicial hit of a revue it entirely out of place and un- 2,000 years an arena cir- said as much to M. Skhrarnek ,, entitled For You. In 'From A Paris forriheir Romans in TRENTON called foe to be compared with 4 to Z a song called Good Night minister of the interior. so called cheap chorus gild cuses and gladiatorial combats, h is held closes Marie the But that up performance, .dignitary like its after all the year of work she returned ta something hands in holy horror. Ah, no, land at the Admiral Palast an a- oct. 21.-- C. a w. when bull, use Trenton, today original and the other women had given Mr. President, he exclaimed motous svain adoringSy sings to went Provo to been has show It lepres-ent opened. fight to church singing. as a spectacle equal It is I, not you, who am in You Have the Most Beautiful Amherrt, College at the Brig advertised Furthermore, there would be in splendor to the shows in the! danger. I am responsible to ham Young University no hyma as far ps they were which opened Octoarenas of Sexille and at Lament for the safety of yourconcerned until due apologies ber fifteenth, with the most promi-- 1 person. If anything should hapMadrid, were made Frank A, Bybee and gen went nent matadors of Spain taking, Pen to you, I would be mterpel-- J s the question raised by one of to Logan Sunday. Mr. Bybee Richard Munn, choir master part It was also advertised that lated on it in the chamber and un the Berlin newspapei s. w ho is not has been taking treatment from making any effort to the bulls would not be killed. doubtedly forced to resign. Thus to An of case a doctor. They . returned home unusual clairvoy-ancyou see, casualty any you organize a temporary choir to The event has been organized is occupying the attention Monday. carry on as long as the women by the press of Paris as a bene-ar- e would be a double one M. Dou J. 0. Patel son cf Loran .was striking, difers with Mrs. fit to soldiers wounded in Mor-- mergue thought a while and fin- of the courts of Rernburg, in Anhalt, where a teacher named a Tienton visitor the middle Qf adder, asserting. occo. The French Red Cross co- - ally exclaimed: I do not see that it is a dis-to an occult de- - the week. Ah. well, I suppose the ser-- , Drost, j operated in staging the affair, Howard Petersen has accept--e- d a been has to called be on to chorus grace tective, arraigned on go girl. priCeR for seats ranged from vice of security has got , a position in .. Los This remark has added more fu-- ! 400francs fora box holding four then. But 1 can see now that its, a charge of illegally practicing d to the flames. ' iim the fiihtei Sajis to ttventy francs for .o your security, not mine, that is; occultism for money. Drost act-- , persons L ually has been able to' cob vinca W think be' rill not ijigLi jiniid seat on the stone tifers. being assured. this witer. the chief expert testifying again in thjftsjr&v? The walks through Hyde Paris are! The har bobbers of was Association Pa1 k, where of a Sunday the be- Dr. st in to him, that Hellwig, these-dayexcuses only Pmaryf the stay Anything Paris,) prolific whiskered dandies of the Great they offer for the use of women and anything to get back to the possession of second sight7. Sunday; Kirs. R. and her Workers Queens reign delighted to dis- who want to pacify husbands America ai e slogans equally couid enable him to make certain I Ite. Shumw, released! with n vbere,1 which with' discoveries is he themselves sudden a before for to short the aphodo not take kindly port responsibe vote of thanks for their rvice. preciative eyes of the opposite isjse in American representation! credited One sample of this has been The new officers were j Presi-sex, arfc monopolized theso days the danger of wearing combs in the dishwashing profession M,s- H. J. Hausefr! first by dogs of all descriptions in land pins made of inflamab'e and in mirk bench lodgings here. brought out. large quanity ' Thcre is a real class distinction of Dundry v as stolen from the - i'0UnseIIinV Jlrs.b S..:!.. Er'pich the tow of vomeirfanders 'who maierias'This excuse is forti- -.1. rnake the same attempt to at- fied by a movement in England between the two, however. aijd: garret of ai house ,n the town ofi'T'I ccunsilcr ;"Mrsr Jere, P.' Oro tract attention with the pets as against the sale of all sorts of tho anything to stay in Paris" Calhe, twenty miles north ofjVltn- Fredone Shumway assist-'omfi- rt rgaret Bingham is refusing to give aid, jBeinburg Altho neighbor Drost he dandies of Vicorian times toys and playthings for children 1, e or sympathy to the nor, his medium has never seen trF , nade in a more personal way. fetersen, organist.. made of conbust'ble substances. sF'?udid program was ren- Women with their canine pets If the husbands persist that anything to get back to Amei- - Calbe, the medium, oh being put unday afternoon in tha swarm to the park every day, not all combs and hairpins are ca, members, whom it profes into a tiance, described exactly ALf e better attendance at but on Sunday Londons bit of so made, the answer is that me- res to scorn. the clothes lines on which theinve outdoors presents, the finest dog tal is too heavy for such purposThe record number of Amer- laundrv was suspended when it bficrameiit meeting. The l show in the country. The dogs es and induces headaches, bndi ican tourists durmg the past was stolen, the kind of clothe j Claikston anil e num-Thwear coored ribbons and natty that tortoise shell is so expen summer has left a record pin? used, and the character (,f v. representing the stalje clothes on The line. the coats, to attract attention, the sive that only millionaire can her of stragglers behind, h .council, President mistress ofteh helps by display- afford it. charm of Paris has captured owner of the ' missing laundrv v,8ltor some of these, the desire to see did not himsilf know all thise!Gn,fln "as a ing some flagrant innovation in and also a Mrs. and speaker, comthe than more of feminine styles. a little Europe details but they later proved to Julia Van Frank Elliott? assistant first counselmissioner of police in London , budget originally called for has bp true. The medium named the lor to the Olden, stake presidency of The days of Good Queen who recently spent a week in left others close to stranded thief and the place where the' These I rim'ary. speakers togeth Bess may have been the golden Paris, studying the new traffic When starvation comes a little laundry was hidden. The thief musical er with the following Amout seek close the of too French the of Capiage was caught and confessed. This English' literature, but regulations they selections three numbers; by they were also the golden age tal, has cheered Paris by this erican aid society. The Societys is said to be only one of the sev-- ! the choir, a solo, Joseph or for the fraternity of- British comment. list for employment eral cases of ciairvoyancy rou waiting a "duet? Mr"' and tailors. That, at least, is the beParis is a well made young transportation now totals four ducted by Drost and his medium sen, P.iherand a violin and piano lief of the president of the Na- - .girl with a fresh complevion hundred, though they are not are puzzling experts. and Maurine Morten duet Hyre four tional Federation of Master that denotes good circulation quite so select as the. other sen. made an enjoyable afterTailors, who has brought out the whereas London is a crossfaced i hundred. The consumption of cordials noon. fact that the average English od lady who must put herself I tried to sell pumps to in Germany today is only one Ray S. Hansen spent Monday business man of' today spends on a diet. Paris, I might add, French farmers, said a neatly third of that of prewar days, ac in Carkstcn. demon-evening about as much on his years seems to have been designed by if shabbily dressed young man cording to a confidential report ?t rat a .new radio. A disconing as his Elizabethan ances- a great artist, while London ap- yesterday, but they dont take compiled by one of the leading nection caused bythe jaring. on tor dispensed for a tingle doub- pears to be the work of a futur- to the things like the Ameri- distilleries; During the last few the his efforts unrendered trip,let and pair of hose- Those were ist. cans- I thought I could pay my years before the World war the On his way, home he availing the brave old days, the master The only solution for Lond- way around Europe, but now average annual consumption if discovered the trouble and listen , when luxury in ons traffic problem would be its the park bench. cordials for each head of popul- ed to a fine musical entertaindress was carried so far that another great fire like that of Work is scarce now and mon- ation was more than three ment. laws were passed to curb it. 1666, and I am not too hopeful ey for transportation is scarcer. quarts. It is now leak than one Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Shumway It is moreover the doleful even about, that, because the It looks like a cold, sad winter, quart.and their little daughter Sybil, plaint of the knights of the London fire department is too whether these belated adven The principal reasons for this went to Salt Lake Wednesday needle and goose that never in efficient these dys ever to let turers want to go or to stay. decline is economic, as the prices the 21st .Mr. Shumway to atthe last four hundred years have & blaze get ajiy headway, of liquors are now too high for tend the U. E. A- - and Mrs. Maries persons of moderate means. This Shumway to take the six week: Englishmen spent less on clothBERLIN, Oct- 24. Fres?dent' Doumergue, like are in high favor 'among the retrogression jjn the consumption course in hair dressing, ing then today, when the purch-asinpower of the tailors aver, most of his predecessors as stage directors of Berlin. Not Mrs, IL K. Hoff returned of heavy drinks is someignore the present state of the chief magistrate of Franceldoes only is the popular refrain of the what offset by the fact that home from Ogden oil the Rose Ma light wines are being consumed ond, clothing trade in England and, not like to be shadowed by .se- . American operetta, ( y i ue j par-Rov- semi-centenni- al y j ) , Angeles-California- j This nevrppper recently printed an editorial iru this column commending for boys. Based upon an actual need for letter leading matter foi Dys, we felt that thq editorial was perhaps of timely importance The national scout periodical Boys Life deserves particular praise. Up to 1912 t'ris favorite boys magazine whs living i decidedly precarious journalistic life. According to Mr. Janies E. Wi rt, editor of Boys Life and chief Scout Executive the magazine had inly three thousand circulation in 1912. Today it has- approximately nt- hundi-et- i paid pubs- nl- i'fty thousrtiid net 0 ers each month. There must be a reason for such success. While it may be an occasional rule that entirely unwoithy magazines succeed, we do not believe that it is "a general nde. A magazine or a liewspapei must be based on sound, . to achieve any lasting prosperity permanent and worthwhile policies. Boyed Life has just such a policy.' Personally, I have read the magazine intermittently foi - Several year and I can S ay frankly that I have never seen a cheap or objectionable line in it. Your boy cannot be harmed by reading Boys Life. Boys Life is conducting a subscription campaign today through iscouting. The Cache Valley Council gives the magazine its entiie and unqualified endorsement. The magazine should be in your beys home. - . hrc-u- -- SUGAR ' Never has any car enjoyed a more enthusiastic reception. Never have people berin more outspoken in their prai.se of any car. dn many cities sales have multiplied beyond precedent. In some sections, the figures for the first ninety days surpass those of the entire preceding year. , More than 100 improvements and new pikes 70 to 350 demand. lower have created an unexampled pation-wid- e Such popularity is an infallible assurance of value. You car? purchase a New Oakland Six with full confidence that'you are selecting the preferred investment in the field. - imbnles. -- Perhaps if the boys today leain'to meet agreeably and contentedly on the common ground around the scout camp fire, there will be little need, when they grow- up, to meet upon a common battle field. Never Before Saiclt Brassaatle Success Cut Intel-nation- peace I ti- Boys are boys everywhere from Utah to Abyssinia. Human quickly and easily, giving he boyish nature is essentially unchangeable whether the boy plays family its customary quota o at baseball or armed with bow and nrrpw-- , at primitive mimic health-bringin- g vegetables. For warfare. There is no fundamental .difference between the tunately there are many whole American boy and the South American boy whctl.tr his skin bekome dishes, including vege white or brown, his eyes blue or black or blown. What is good; tables, that can be baked with for the'American boy, really should oe beneficial to the South jn twenty minutes, so that th 'American boy. South America is planning to introduce the .scout! whole oven meal can be pre movement into thgt continent of unlimited povoliililios. What pared in half an ho'ur. Meat cai scouting will do there, of course, is yei tor be seen but tbeie be cooking in the broilei be little doubt if its eventual success. though many baked vegetabl Two delegates of the Scout Bureau: Mr. Donald l.shes are adequate meat sub Makgill of London and Mr.. A. D. Jamieson of Detroit have beerr chutes. Materials for the bak invited to go to South America for the purpose of promoting the cl dishes can be economicall establishment of Scout Councils in our sister continent to the ourchased at the grocers durinj south. f Canned boods Week, Novembe Taking for granted that world peace would be a good thing 9th to 21st at which time i' --for the wor Id, it is very questionable whether the present gen- is possible to buy cases, con eration of our elders will ever succeed in doing what five thousand a variety including years of historical efforts of mankind have failed to do. There tabling delicacies, ai novelties, staples, is hope however for world peace if the present generation ot wcild boyhood can be taught that it is a part of wisdom to con- enormous assortment, all at re vert the swords into plowshares and. in a more mqdern wav luccd prices. Baked Peas peai-e-tim- I beaten whites of thioe ggs. Put in buttered timbale voids, set in a pail of hot watirj nd bake in a moderate o en ai ll firm.' Turn out cn hot plate, 'arnish vith slices of hard boil'd egg,. if desri-d- , and pour wince of cheese suuc around th js grateVuloIrthe oven, and would like to prepar a baked meal if she can do s divert poison gases into channels more useful and more kind than the destruction of human life. Scouting is a puisuit. In its broadest sense Scouting is international. World peace will lie preserved internationallv when boys fathers understand each other better. The hearts ot the fathers should be turned to the.childien andin being turned so should leave little space in the paternal minds for internal iona warfare. A world wide movement for better boyhood, such at pouting is ..should bring the woiH.veiy dose to the ideal: woild IAOE ELEVEN UTAI1 COUNTY, Household Notes ' Quick Oven Meals EDITORIVI CACTTT5 eS-S-- it $- " r 0 - -- I h-- e j s , i j 1 A j - j - -- - Secre-grou- , - J i fi.j-a- k- Senerom ! i . j NEWS NOTES Logan Chapter of Rotary International announces today a e luncheon to be given by 'this' organization.' to all the scoutmasters and deputy commissioners of the Logan District to be held in the Hotel Eccfes October 29. We' can assure Rotary of Scoutlngs hearty support of this affair.. Eagle Scout Elmer Edwards has been appointed scoutmaster of Troop 20 to succeed Lyman Pickett who has resigned. Scouting extends the best of luck to Elmer. Another new scoutmaster is Earl Hunsaker who will succeed Randolph Riter as the leader of Troop 16. The new scoutmaster is an experienced and enthusiastic scout worker and the Council Ls confident of his success. , An interesting note coming from the scout office his week is to the effect that Scoutmaster Peter A. C, Pedprsen, has applied for Veteran rank in Scouting. If veteran work in scouting is any reason why this honor should' be granted, Scoutmaster Pedersen Should have no trouble in- receiving the honor. Wesley Johnson has been named to succeed J. V. Adams. as Scoutmaster of Troop 18. ' , A short time ago'Ve announced the resignation of vanez Wilsdn as scoutmaster of Troop 9. Leland Hailstone will succeed ' Mr. Wilson to that position. It is probable that Mr. Wilson," an in experienced scout worker, will Jae used in some other office ' ' 4 the movement. The Older Scouts Conference for Utah was held m Salt Lake City, Thursday, Friday and Saturday of this week. Scout Harold M. Peterson Troop S was in general charge of the program. wide-awak- , - ... i j i - war-drob- e - - tailors-agree- - -- - g twenty-sec- i |