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Show THE JOURNAL 8. MAY 17. 195: To Display At State Fair yr- V 11 - j!-i'- i Feel Like Splurging A Little? . Then Try Baked Ham Hollywood By ALICES DENHOFF COMES ths occasion for a mod- serve with baked ham or chicken, or to enhance a platter of cold cuts, try this new fritter recipe. Combine one c. mashed sweet potatoes and ft c. stewed dried apricots crushed. Mix with 2 tbsp. melted butter and salt to taste. Shape mixture Into small balls, dip In one beaten egg, roll In bread crumbs (or crushed com flakes) and fry In deep fat (or flatten and fry In frying pan). If necessary, add some crumbs to the mixture to make It stiff enough to handle. And while were on the subject, heres another excellent accompaniment for meat Spiced Ba- est splurge, something different and extra good. Well, Baked Bam Hollywood certainly fills the bill, as we discovered recently. Buy a ham of 10 to 12 pounds; wash It thoroughly In hot water. Remove skin from ham. Make incisions In the meat with a sharp knife and Insert small strips of orange peel Make a paste of 2 tbsp. prepared mustard, 4 tbsp. brown4 sugar, ft tap. black pepper and tbsp. glycerine (the latter to blend and accentuate the various flavors). Cover entire ham with this paste nanas. and dot with cloves. Grape Juice Basting Bake In a covered roaster, using for basting. lft c. of grape Juice done. (The until Bake at 325F. length of time depends on the size of the ham, allowing 30 minutes per pound.) I Thirty minutes before ham Is done, wipe six canned peaches or apricots with 3 tbsp. glycerine, Insert some cloves In the fruit and place around the ham. Pour another ft c. of grape Juice over fruit Cook with ham for 30 minutes. (A little hot water may be added If ham becomes too dry.) Baste frequently with the grape juice while ham Is baking. , Distributors of farm equipment and implements are being urged to exhibit at the coming 1052 Utah State Fair, according to an announcement by President E. A. Parson. A new display area, which will be well lighted and all under cover, is being provided to house such exhibits. The new section will adjoin the Grandstand area and will have a beautifully lighted and decorated entrance. The exhibit will be allotted. 12, 000 square feet of space and the entire section will be hard surfaced. The new exhibit 1 space will be subdived into ' booths, allowing plenty of aisle space for specta- - tors so get around. One of the outstanding exhibits already planned for this division will be the U. S. Department of Agriculture exhibit entitled Farm Machinery. This exhibit will occupy a space running 140 feet along the aisle with a 10 foot depth. It will show, in detail, mechanized farming with views and models of everything new in farm machinery. These exhibits from the Agricultural Department have always been shown at the State Fair, but heretofore they were set up in the Mining Building. Each year, the Department provides a different display, and all have been exceedingly educational. The Mining exhibits this year will be increased. to cover many of the industries throughout the State. Coal mining is to have an important place in this section. Oil production and refining will also have its own display. The en- tire mining exhibit building will be rearranged and new exhibit spaces set up. New lighting will be installed and this promises to be one of the most interesting sections of the 1952 Fair. Miss Ellis Will Lead Gleaners Miss Colleen Ellis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Owen Ellis of Farmington and a member of the First ward, was elected president of the Davis stake Junior Gleaners at recent elections. Committee members who will serve with Miss Ellis are: Angie Caroldyn Webster, Kaysville; Smoot, Centerville; Marie King, Kaysville; Lucy Phillips, North Johann ' Dobson, Farmington; Farmington; Maxine Burton Kaysville;, Donna Everett, Centerville; FARMINGTON Spiced Bananas c. vinegar, 2 c. sugar, Boll doz. whole cloves and one small stick cinnamon together fmtU sugar la dissolved and the syrup 2 thick. Drop 3 peeled bananas Into the hot syrup and boll for 2 minutes. Remove from fire and cooL If desired, the bananas may be cut Into smaller pieces. And, for the five-stfinal, another different and delightful meat garnish. Maks a syrup of lft e. sugar, ft c. water, Juice of one lemon and 2 cinnamon sticks. Wash oranges and cut lh thick slices.' Place in hot syrup and boll gently, without covering, until rind New Fritter Recipe Is clear. Chill In syrup before And for something luscious to serving. ar ! Grace Tingey, Centerville, Junior Gleaner stake leader, conducted the elections held in the Farmington LDS ward recreation hall. Roign of Hoqlth QfeDDi incj 1 Gfnnouncenienh . . With Distinction! invitations Wedding announcements and printed by us have an indefinable air of grace and beauty. SEAMING Do hours of work in minutes on your farm . . . with Electric milkers, water system, conveyQrs and many other helpers. It pays so many ways to use tricity on the farm! ; ; , v i9tss$r ' V1 V (Jte fi Ur iWiiHsHv etna? dtnariutV fitanlumh wholesomeCar-rin- . BUY FROM YOUR DEALER cf o, ness and happiness; Gerald 5, and Theresa Mielty, 4, pose together after they were crowned King and Queen of Health at the Childrens Aid Society West Side Center in New York City. elec-tri- e elec- SMILES i . . FORESIGHT In south Houston, a stray alley-cwandered into the U. S. Post Office building and gave birth to four kittens under the Special De, livery table. at THOUGHTS Some mep. blaze a way. Others only blaze away. .The hardest thing to give is in. If all the cars in the country were placed end to end, 90 per cent of the drivers would pull out to pass. . t ... .. .. - - 1 . Inland Phone 10 Kaysvillor . - i i Co. .. c. i' ' , v 1 |