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Show SOUTH CACHE COURIER HYRUM, UTAH iiiiuiiiiuiwiiiiiwiuiuiiiiuiiujmuiiu ufOPEN LtTTER I The Kitchen Cabinet TO WOMEN niiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiH sa3p . 1920. pound of patience and With words of honey sweet. I Endurance a quart and energy roll . In ail you desire to eat. -- I was not able to FhtXisework and had to lie down , most Of the time and felt bad in my left aide. My monthly periods were irregular, sometimes five or seven months apart and when they did appear woulddast for two weeks and were very painfuL I sick for about a Iwas and a half and WARM WEATHER DISHES. t alter i srartea ran.-S- and I kept total better months. Now I 54ine it for seven and perform all my You can use these facts as Vege-W- p nlease and I will recommend Compound house-rfLiiti- es to everyone who suffers little, J- - S. ilvineston St., Philadelphia, Pa. 3455 harder the daily tasks of . Joman become when she suffers from weakness such distressing symptamsand Mrs. Little. No woman should Sow herself to get into such a condition be speedily because such troubles may overcome by Lydia E. Pmkhams Vegetfor more than able Compound, which American been restoring has years forty women to health. Couldnt Find All of It. Museum of r in the noticed an old patiently pacing around and around the Williamite meteor, said to Ameribe the largest ever found in old the of helping ca. With the hope man out of his difficulty the attendant asked him if there was any special information he desired about the metThe attendant Natural History man-kep- t eor. man paused, but did not stop contemplating the meteor. Theres nothing you care to know, then? asked the attendant. admitted the old man, there Yes, Where's the meteors is something. tail were always hearing about? confessed himself The attendant Sun. New York stumped. The old Cuticura Improve Your Skin. rising and retiring gently smear the face with Cuticura Ointment. Wash off Ointment in five minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water. It is wonderful sometimes what Cuticura will do for poor complexions, dandruff, itching and red rough hands. Watch On World Loves Sweet Smells. the international cosmetics and all but such articles come quickly back to their own in foreign trade. This appears in the fact that in 1920 exports of ,these articles from this country were valued at $8,739,593, which is over five times the value in the year of 1914. Our largest buyer was England; our next, Cuba; third, Australia ; and fourth Brazil. War discourages sale of perfumes, toilet preparations, pre-w- In the onion-raise- should be union there rs strength. the warm days approach the appetite craves cooling vegetables and desserts frozen with less of meat and pastry. Many desserts and salads may be prepared sometime before they are needed, thus making the meal at serving time easier to serve. The simpler and less inexpensive desserts appeal to the housewife who has all her own work to do and during the hot weather she Is wise to make her work as light as possible. Gelatine desserts and such combinations are all right for occasions, but they are not liked too often. Maple Pudding. Mix together a cup-- , ful and a quarter of maple syrup, a tablespoonful of sugar, four beaten egg yolks and cook in a double boiler until smooth. Soak two tablespoonfuls of gelatin in two tablespoonfuls of water, add to the cooked mixture; when cool stir in the stiffly beaten whites of the eggs and a pint of whipped cream. Put into a mold and YIE supii of button-hole- s pack in ice and salt to harden. in this country will never Orange Sherbet. Take one egg, one exceed the supply of butquart of milk, one pint of cream, tons if Uncle Sam can the juice and grated rind of three it. The governprevent oranges, the juice and rind of one ment has never taken a lemon and two and one half cupfuls in census of button-hole- s of sugar. Beat the egg and add to the the United States, Lit fedmilk, cook until the egg is cooked, eral enumerators in the cool, add to the cream. Dissolve the last census discovered that the value sugar In the fruit juice and add to of all buttons produced In this counthe other mixture. Freeze as usual. try in a single year is more than bilRaspberry Whip. Crush a cupful of This represents several raspberries, add a cupful of sugar and lions of buttons. bent into the mixture two egg whites, r mussel, ihe lowly The whipping until the mixture is stiff clam of the old swimming hole, is the enoiigh to stand up. Serve in sherbet largest single source of buttons in this cups with whole berries on top. country. Something like 75,000 tons of Broiled brush rooms. Select large, clam shells are used annually in the mushrooms, peel the caps, manufacture of morp than 50,000,000 remove the stems and put the caps gill gross of pearl buttons which, at presside up in the broiler with a bit of butter ent prices, are valued at more than in each. Cook until well done. Serve $15,000,000. In addition to buttons, the stems chopped, eooked in butter the mussel snells are also used in the and with a few tablespoonfuls of manufacture of novelties. Jewelry, cream added. chicken feed, wad materials and composition marble. What might be do e If men were wise! Several years ago the bureau of fishWhat glorious deeds, my suffering eries discovered that the great clam brother, beds which are the source of the best Would they unite In love and might. And cease their scorn of one another. buttons were being rapidly exhausted. Chas. Mackay. Investigation showed that nature in her propagation and growth of pearl but- o EVERYDAY GOOD THINGS. wasteful. It was ton material natural found propagation of that to a time When you hafe prepare and com little extra dish the following will be mussels could be improved were means and trolled artificially well worth your trouble: In beds. the clam f Hamburg Steak With taken to restock ada are necessary fish Cabbage. Wash and this scheme wipe dry the firm, crisp junct. clams have. Just When fresh-watoutside leaves from a head of cabbage. Pre started their development they must are pare the steak by mix- become parasitic upon fish if they as soon as Almost a with to reach maturity. salt, pepper, ing bit of clove and nutmeg they are hatched the baby clams atas well as a little onion tach themselves to the gills of Ash. sauHew they cling for the next week or Have the steak Juice. and two. balls When they have developed suffl-- , small into make sage meat, brown in the frying pan until nicely ciently to shift for themselves, they the browned, but not cooked through. Now detach themselves and drop to If undisturbed there, river. the the in of bed leaf, ball each cabbage wrap of skewer with tooJi picks and place in the; become full grown at the end walittle a with five boiling years. a frying pan ter. Cover closely and cook for half The trouble with this natural process an hour or until the cabbage is ten of development is that the great maServe with the gravy poured jority of tiny clams do not find fish der. over the cakes. Tomato sauce Is very to which they may attach themselves, and they die in their infancy. Exgood with, this dish. .Is A which dessert Quick Dessert. perts of the bureau of fishery then conhave you ceived the idea of artificially infectqutckly prepared, provided the ingredients, Is this: Arrange ing the fish with the parasites, and imUnsquares of sponge cake on dessert mediately the problem was solved. can flafish a treatment and sweetened with artificial this der plates, heap vored whipped cream and on top of carj'y a thousand or more embryo musthe cream place a canned apricot, sels in its gills, whereas under natround side up. It will look like a ural conditions It may become host to only a dozen or so. poached egg and taste better. The principal Raspberry Sponge. Fill an earthen bowl with layers of toasted bread aqd streams are found in the states of Minraspberries,- sprinkled with nesota, .Wisconsin, Illinois, Missouri, fresh sugar. When the.imvl is full, cover Arkansas, Indiana, Ohio, Tennessee, and put under a weight, let stand for Kentucky and Alabama, the Mississippi two hours. Remove the weight and river producing the largest number of Serve In shells. The mussel fishery is a perserve with a large spoon. sweetened manent and Important industry, and in each over pour cups, and fishcream to which some of the scarcely any locality where a shell ever has it established once was added. ery has been extent Prune Flip. Take 30 prunes, a half been entirely abandoned. The in may vary any locality whites of of the fishery cupful of chopped nuts, the however, as it Is four eggs and four tabiespoonfuls of from year to year, of influences, such Until soft; subject to a variety sugar. Stew the prunes of certain shells for demand add sugar anti as the chop with the walnuts; of the river, the the white. stages Bake qualities, fold in the beaten egg local Industry, and the of until condition dish baking in a the degree of exhaustion of the mafirm. terial. . The method of mussel fishery most I id a I M generally In use today Ja, with the . j xLLLLL w bar and crowfoot hooks. The As without second day self-contr- ol When mixing your cake be not a machine, ' But st udy the why and the how. And lenrn from lessons of sorrow hygiene. The effects of all you allow. -- Mrs. Mary C. Upham. improvement. any Western Newspaper Union.) A ' $50,-000,00- 0. fresh-wate- even-size- d al-e- w-a-s . ( er BETTER DEAD one-thir- d Life is a is racked burden when the body with pain. Everything worries and the victim becomes despondent and downhearted. To bring back the sunshine take GOLD MEDAL The National Remedy of Holland for over 200 years; it is an enemy of all citing from kidney, liver and troubles. tok pains reuric add All druggists, three sizes. every box for the name Gold Medal on and accept no imitation YOU CANT CUT OUT - A B06 SPAVIN ON THOBOUGHPIN you can clean them off promptly with and you work the horse tame time. Does not blister or remove the i Ua VAS hair. $2.50 per bottle, delivered. Will tell you more if you write. Book 4 R free. ABSORBING JR., the antiseptic liniment for mankind, reduces Varicose Veins, Ruptured Mucin of Unmenti. Baltrced Cluuii. WcM, bBk VMdT Prk Inc.. HOTsmls VerY It, BprlnaNeld. Mass. Girl Nine to Ninety ust Have Some woarti.j !ate,t touch to any costume by k8t Organdy Flowers. quistuT,med iatlee all wearing them. Ex- petlt roaee, assorted colors, r,Sularlv.',.Met elilnX about two dollars, postpaid, tor nni doIlr with names and ad- ve t your friends. Guaranteed to dIi.L'T ' Ash for plan to furnish ma- tr(aaayo1t,,Rch 120 o.,ni you. LOIS BRYANT. Bo T - . berry-juic- mussel-yieldin- g e well-buttere- d. . I Vldlf,. idL. Utv d, method is based on the characteristic r mussels, habits of the which lie habitually half imbedded in the bottom of a stream, with th hinder end of the shell directed against the current and slightly gaping. If a stick or hook be inserted into the opening of the shell, the mussel at once closes tightly and will hold for a long time, even while being dragged over the bottom and hauled up to the boat. The more elaborate apparatus now used was first brought to' the notice of the river men of the upper Mississippi in 1897. The crowfoot apparatus consists essentially of a bar to which many wire short lines, bearing hooks, are arranged at intervals. By means of a towingk line ihe bar is dragged above the bottom, while the hooks trail on the mussel bed with the current. When a hook enters a shell opening, the mussel closes upon the hook, and In consequence Is dragged from the bottom. When the bar Is raised after a suitable time, numerous mussels may be hanging from the hooks. It is usual to equip barges with a number of these bars so that the bed of a stream may be dragged thoroughly. The most satisfactory boat has been found to be the ordinary John boat. Its length Is frrim 14 to 20 feet, with a width at the center of from 3 to 5 feet, but it always has narrower ends, and Is usually of light draft. For work on a much larger scale, heavy barges, approximately 10 by 40 feet, are used. After the mussels are brought ashore the soft parts must be removed. Where pearling is the exclusive object, each mussel may be opened with a knife inserted between the valves of the shells, ,so as to sever the adductor muscles ; the meat is then cut out and examined for pearls. Such a process, however, is entirely too slow and tedious for preparing shells for market, so the cooking-ou- t process is exclusively employed in the shell fishery. The mussels are cooked in a vat 5 feet long by 2 feet wide and from 12 to 18 inches deep. Thfs usually takes about a half hour. After reaching the button factory the shells are first soaked in tanks or vats for a week or more. The soaking process is intended to soften the material, which would otherwise be too hard on the saws, as well as so brittle as to chip and yield blanks with rough edges. The machine used in cutting is essentially a lathe fitted with a tubular saw of the necessary diameter to obtain tHe required size of button, and a wooden plug and a ratchet handle or lever for gradually forcing the Fough shell against the rapidly rotating saw. The shell is held In position either by prongs or by the hand protected with a mitten. Successive blanks as they are cut are crowded through the tubular saw to fall Into a receptacle below. The sizes of the buttons are by the inner diameter of the fresh-wate- four-pronge- d jpazjsjEtzzrtr c&zx&rJ cutting end of the saw, and tney range d of an inch to one from about inch in diameter. In novelty works buttons an Inch and a half or larger one-thir- are made. Before going to the finishing machines the blanks are usually passed through four intermediate processes. First they are passed through a blank classifier, where, by falling between rollers they are separated into different lots according to thickness. Next they are placed in tumblers, consisting of heavy and slowly revolving barrels of iron or wood, in which they are churned with water and pumice stone to clean them and remove any possible rough edges. The blanks are then fitready for the. grinder, a machine which wheel grinds ted with an emery away the horny backs and reduces the blanks to a uniform thickness. Finally the blanks are again soaked in water to be softened for the finishing machine. They are then ready for the essential processes of button making, which are accomplished by an automatic machine of comparatively recent invention and of very Ingenious design. The blanks are fed by hand into depressions in the tops of vertical chucks, which are arranged in series constituting an endless chain. As the chucks in the endless chain pass around the circumference of the machine each blank is automatically operated upon by various tools, and each tool is automatically sharpened and prepared for the succeeding blank. The processes accomplished in the machine consist in rounding the edges and carving out the center In the desired pattern. After the first hole the drill rises, the button makes a turn through a fourth or half of one revolution (according to or whether It is to be a four-hol-e when the drill again descends to make a new hole.' After the last hole is drilled the chuck opens automatically to release the button, which is sucked into a tube connected with the blower system to be dropped into a bucket through a counting tube. From the cutting machine the but- -' tons are taken to the churns, where they are tumbled, or churned, with water and pumice stone to clean them, take off the rough edges, and make them ready for receiving the final polish. The polishing is also a tumbling process, in which, however, sulphuric acid is used in conjunction with steam. After the buttons are dried In shakers with sawdust, they are placed with dry sawdust and washing powder in a combined tumbler And shaker. This process removes any trace of limy deposit and gives the final luster. Finally the buttons are conveyed in buckets or boxes to the sorting room where they are sorted according to qualities and grades and sewed to suitable cards for packing in boxes, ready to be soid, . lake city, Utah ' - |