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Show i t Page Sun Chronicle 2 Clearfield Courier running desperately to catch train, only to have it pull out just ahead of him. As he returned breathless to the station platform, he commented to an onlooker, I didnt run fast enough. The onlooker replied, No, you didnt start soon enough. a The secret of success is to never be caught behind. It is not in how fast you run but in when and how well you start. The story is told about a man My friends and parents, when one begins with something new there are always questions we cannot escape but there are affirmations we should not doubt. Sand Ridge Jr. High is a place of worth for those who care enough to look for it. I think we must be short on criticism and long in serious study of the questions. We must not look back but forward to thre reality of today and its needs. In matters of education there will always Dear Editor: You are to be commended for the fine coverage and support you give to the community and citizens. be questions. It will never be an either-o- r matter. It requires a to reach the faith deeper depths of fuller living. Sand Ridge has launched out into the deep, but not for the sake of mere exploration. It is searching faithfully to find better answers for the good of each student. It is a school of concern, living to grow and produce. It is important to understand. Lets not be caught later on when its too late, like the man running after the train. Remember, its not a matter of running fast enough; its a matter of starting soon enough We have started. Please join us and learn what it is all about. We have a parent-advisor- y I dont know of another paper that has the interest of the area people at heart as does your paper. The on coverage Washington the Terrace Recreation football teams was a splendid public service and will no doubt prompt our youth to greater goals. We enjoyed the feature on Paul Cannon and the honor he brought to our state. Our children take interest in your news articles and the column on artists has en- couraged continue nights. our family our home to music committee that the first Thursday Congratulations and best wishes on a very informative and much appreciated paper. Jerry Hancock Sincerely, The Chester Findley Family, Riverdale meets on of each month at 10 a m. Hope you can be there. Sand Ridge Jr. High kirkirirkirkitltirk'kirklrk Once I was given a copy of a recip belonging to hlent Dwight I). Eisenhower. Not only does it sound gn, !, bui his written explanations are very interesting, too. I- VEGETABLE SOUP The best time to make a vegetable soup is a day or so after you have had fried chicken and you saved the necks, ribs, backs, etc., uncooked. The chicken is not essential, but it does add something. Procure from the meat market a good beef soup bone the bigger the better. It is a rather good idea to have it split down the middle so that all the marrow is exposed. In addition, buy a couple pounds of ordinary soup meat, either beef or mutton or both. Put all this meat, early in the morning, in a big kettle. The best kind is heavy aluminum, but a good iron pot will do almost as well. Put in the bony parts of the chicken you saved. Cover it with water, something on the order of five quarts. Add a teaspoon of salt, a bit of black pepper, and, if you like, a touch of garlic (one small piece.) If you dont like garlic put in an onion. Boil all this slowly all day long. Keep on boiling till the meat has literally dropped off the bone. If your stock boils down during the day, add enough water from time to time to keep the meat covered. When the whole thing has practically disintegrated pour out into another large kettle through colander. Make sure that the marrow is out of the bones. Let this drain through the colander for quite awhile as much juice will drain put of the meat. Shake the colander well to help get out all the juice. Save a few; of the better pieces of meat just to cut up a iittje bit jg niall pieces to put into your soup after it is . done, flit tHeTTetfle containing the stock you now have in a very cool place - outdoors in the winter time or in the ice box; let it stand all night and the next day until you are ready to make your soup. You w ill find that a hard layer of fat has formed on top of the stock w hich can usually be lifted off since the whole kettle full of stock has jelled Some people like a little bit of tlie fat left on and some like their soup very rich and do not remove more than about half of the fat. Put the stock back into your kettle and you are now ready to make vour soup. In a separate pan, boil slowly about a third of a teacup-fu- l of barley. This should be cooked separately since it has THE TRUE STORY Of A MAN YOULL ALWAYS REMEMBER HE BECAME A LEGEND YOULL NEVER FORGET... a habit, in a soup kettle, of settling to the bottom and if your fire should happen to get too hot it is likely to burn. If you cannot get barley use rice, but it is a poor substitute. One of the secrets of making good vegetable soup is not to cook any of the vegetables too long. However, it is impossible to give you an exact measure of the vegetables you should put in because some people like their vegetable soup almost as thick as stew, others like it much thinner. Moreover, sometimes you can get exactly the vegetables you want: other times you have to substitute. Where you use canned vegetables, put them in only a few minutes before taking the soup off the fire. If you use fresh ones, naturally they must be fully cooked in the soup. The things put into the soup are about as follows: 1 qt. canned tomatoes teacupful of fresh peas. If you cant get peas, a handful of good green beans cut up very small can substitute. 2 normal sized potatoes, diced into cubes of about V2 inch size. 2 or 3 branches of good celery 1 good-sizeonion, sliced 3 nice-size- d carrots, diced about me same size as the potatoes. 'ic. canned corn 1 turnip, diced like the potatoes A handful of raw cabbage, cut up in small pieces. Your vegetables should not all be dumped in at once. The potatoes, for example, will cook more quickly than the carrots. Your effort must be to have them all nicely cooked but not mushy, at about the same time. The fire must not be too hot but the soup should keep bubbling. "When you figure the soup is about'done, purim yoiif barley which should now be fully cooked, add a tablespoonful of prepared gravy seasoning and taste for flavoring, particularly salt and pepper, and if you have it, use some onion salt, garlic salt and celery salt. If you cannot get the gravy seasoning, use one teaspoonful of Worcestershire d sauce. Cut up the few bits of the meat you saved and put about a small handful into the soup. While cooking the soup do not allow the liquid to boil down too much. Add a bit of water from time to time. If your stock was good and thick when you started, you can add more water than if it was thin when you started. As a final touch, in the springtime when nasturtiums are green and tender, you can take a few nasturtium stems, cut them up in small pieces, boil them separately as you did the barley, and add them to your soup. About one tablespoon after cooking. CLAM CHOWDER 2 2 1 1 med. potatoes, chopped in small pieces stalks celery, finely chopped med. onion, finely chopped carrot, grated Simmer the vegetables in the juice from 2 cans of clams, adding a small amount of water if necessary on low heat until tender. Make a white sauce from 34 c. butter, 34 c. flour and 2 c. milk (using 1 c. milk and 1 c. cream makes it richer). Cook white sauce until thickened. Add to vegetables. Add clams and seasoning (1 tsp each of thyme, salt and pepper). Simmer slowly until ready to serve. The thyme gives the soup a very unique flavor and if you dont have some, you puld buy a small can. CREAM OF POTATO SOI P 6 c. sliced potatoes ' c. sliced carrots i slices bacon C. chopped onions 1 C. chopped celery 12 tsp. salt 4 t. pepper 2 c. milk 2 c. light cream Parsley sprigs Cook potatoes and carrots in boiling salted water until tender. Drain. Saute bacon until crisp: drain and crumble. Saute onion and celery in 2 Tbl. of bacon fat. Combine cooked vegetables, bacon, salt, pepper, milk and cream. Simmer for about 30 minutes (do not boil) Garnish with parsley and shredded cheddar cheese. Makes about 2 quarts. Half and half or condensed milk or coffee rich may be used for light cream. Do not use all milk. 6 1 The greatest wildlife and chase story MIKE MAZURKL r in c in the history of the North! JIMMY KANE WnJivm CajPixCf1 STARTS SUNDAY THREE DAYS ONLY Novembor Weekdays 5:00, 7:00, 9:00 Sunday 1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:00, 9:00 SORRY, NO PASSES 23-2- 5 ICOflSIDGRIflG (PCCTEAITI schemes, frond examples are preventable Rip-o- ff Proposed defense cut Sen. Jake Garn today disagreed with reports that nine thousand positions will be eliminated from the Armys Depot Maintenance Program but said that any reduction in force is too much Sen. Garn said he was told by the Senate Defense Subcommittee on Appropriations that it plans to recommend to the full committee that $20 million of the $30 million cut from the program by the House be restored, thereby funding a program that is 40 per cent above the funding for fiscal year 1975. There are rumors that the program will lose 9,000 employes nationwide and, specifically, 850 from the Tooele Army Depot, Sen. Garn said. From all that I have been told, this just isnt true. There will likely be some cuts in personnel nationwide, but just how many there will be and what effect it will have on Tooele isnt known at this time. Having said that, let me say that I oppose any cut in the program at all. It is very politically popular these days to criticize the military and make it the target of large budget cuts. Apparently Congress doesnt realize that when it cuts the military budget, it also cuts out civilian jobs. Depot Maintenance Program is a case in point. Then politicians turn around and complain of high unemployment and jobs demand money for public service make-worand increased unemployment benefits Experience shows that money cut from the military budget doesnt go back to the taxpayers It is taken and put elsewhere. I am not saying there is no waste in the military and that it should be free from budget restraints. But where you have a program that is providing worthwhile civilian jobs in a time of high umemployment, Congress should leave it alone. I am for maintaining full funding of the Depot Maintenance Program. It will provide for the national defense and will at the same time keep the unemployment rolls from growing Education is often the key to preventing fraud. This week, as part of the Sun Chronicles efforts for state d week, we are printing examples of common fraud and rip-of- f schemes with the hopes that it may help our readers prevent such things happening to them. Week, Nov. was initiated by the Utah Bankers Association in an effort to educate people and there by prevent them from becoming the victims of professional fraud artists. The following are common fraud examples and what you can do to protect yourself from being victimized: The Bank Examiner Bunco Bunco fraud is one of the most frustrating and difficult to solve crimes. The bunco artists are generally highly skilled and highly mobile professionals. In the case of the Bank Examiner fraud, the crew generally from out of state, will set up operations in a motel room, run a canvas of 40 to 50 possible victims, hit three or four and be on their way within a matter of three to four days. Quite often a victim is first contacted by a female purporting to be a clerk with a bank. Claiming to be checking records she will make the initial efort to determine the victims bank. Cleverly screening potential victims shell set up a future call from a purported bank officer. Within a day the fake bank officer will follow up, and, if successful, will determine the victims bank and the amount of account and then will savings solicit the victims aid in trapping a dishonest employee. The bank officer or examiner will request complete secrecy and may even suggest that the FBI is involved. The victim will be requested to withdraw a specific amount of money, an amount slightly less than the total deposit, and turn this money over to an FBI agent or bank examiner at a specified location. The victim is even given an official looking receipt, and a promise of the return of funds withi n a few days. By the time the victim becomes concerned about the further lack of contact and return of money, the bunco artists are already fleecing other victims in another Anti-Frau- Anti-Frau- d 16-2- k state. Pessimistic about economy The crime is particularly heinous since it victimizes those who are usually elderly with modest savings and no replacement income and who have acted out of a sense of civic duty. Utahns are overwhelmingly pessimistic about the future of the nations economy, according to a special issues questionnaire being returned to Sen. Frank E. Moss. Law enforcement officers could be greatly aided in apprehending these criminals if anyone approached with such a request could agree to help, then immediately contact their bank or local law enforcement agency. Citizens should know that no bank would operate in such a manner. Request for information as to deposits are never made by When asked whether the economic picture would clear improve or worsen in the next six months, majority of those who responded indicated that they believed it would worsen. The questionnaire, which contained 19 questions on various current issues, was sent out in August as a routine questionnaire. It was expected that the response also would be routine. Instead, Moss office was swamped with the largest known return on a questionnaire for any senator. We have now tabulated the results of 55,000 Moss said, and the questionnaires, ,responses,areir that the nation, s economy. will worsen., m,; running phone. Authenticity of any call can be verified by calling the bank and asking for the person named after first verifying the phone number by looking in the telephone directory or calling information. named A new ,, r, . , Hot TV Swindle to hit the .ytah?rnievis jraud television&atSwiil&at b . . - the .bot . 3-- 2 M we J five-yea- suspicious and asks for the carton to be opened, he sees a cellophane wrapped cabinet inside the box. The transaction is made and carton or cartons transferred to the buyers. Upon arriving home after work, the cartons are opened to disclose a cabinet shell with no chassis or simply worthless weighting material. The Pigeon Drop potential victim or mark is engaged in conversation with a stranger. A third person appears on the scene and pretends to have found a package of money or a valuable piece of jewelry or some other item of great value. The first stranger insists the he and the mark share the find. The finder agrees if the other two will put up something of value, money or jewelry, to prove their good faith. Often .this is put in a bag and the victim is allowed to hold the bag while the finder and first stranger attend to other business. Naturally, on inspection the bag is found to have worthless contents. Best protection here is to remember nothing is free and the mark is actually participating in a dishonest act. If approached, the potential victim should make every attempt to contact local police immediately and try to help identify the bunco artists. A Sen. Jake Garn has announced his intention to seek action which hopefully will bring about the dismantling of the Community Action Program. Citing his experience as mayor of Salt Lake City, Sen. Garn said the administration of the program is a boondoggle. CAP administrators i ,ve a long history of trying to make end runs around locally elected officials, Sen. Garn said. Utah Gov. Ramptons efforts to bring accountability into the program statewide have been frustrated by what he calls administrative not the least of which has been the nightmares, bungling of Community Services Administration officials in Denver. As a result of the whole mess, Gov. Rampton has notified the Feds that the state is getting out of the CAP business. The Salt Lake City Commission has publicly stated its desire to get rid of CAP altogether; they apparently dont want the nightmare either and they dont see the justification of the program. I want to emphasize that it is not my intent to try and change what is being done at the neighborhood level, but to change the administrative structure and funding of the program. I am drafting letters to the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare and the Subcommittee on Housing and Urban Affairs of which I am a member, urging that oversight hearings be held on the Community Services Administration and Community Development Program. I'm confident my concerns will be substantiated by the hearings. I recommend abolishing a separate agency for Community Action (presently the Community Services Administration); transferring the social services now provided through CAP, such as Headstart, Veterans Outreach and so forth, to appropriate administrative agencies within the Department of Health, Education and Welfare; transferring the other CAP functions other than social services to the Department of Housing and Urban Development as part of HUD's Community Development Program. If this were done, it would place these programs under the jurisdiction of elected and accountable public officials; as it stands now, they are being operated outside local jurisdiction and cant really be controlled, Sen. Carn stated. The Home Improvement Ripoff The householder is approached by workmen or contractors who offer to repair furnances, oil roofs, repair dangerous electrical connections or any other number of home improvements. In all cases the householder is either offered a spectacular deal or is warned of great danger to health, life andor property. In the case of the good deal, this is usually explained with a wink and a line about materials left over from another job, or stuff the boss wont miss. Invariably the end result is an unhappy householder minus some hard earned money. The victim, in some cases fleeced by his own dishonesty, is often too embarrassed to notify authorities. Best protection is to deal with reputable local businessmen with the certain knowledge that you get what you pay for. In the event of the furnace repair or electrical dangerous condition, repair service to remedy a stall for time and contact your local public utility office. Give them full information, and if requested, try to work with your local law enforcement agency. fR CHRISTMAS home it make sense therefore doomed before you start CTI IPkl I U Lf I to trust to a y0ur family cut-rat- e impr.'hgwCioi to Dismantling Community Action How long hos it ben since you ve had a line poftroit for such an occasion e How long will it be before you con do this e How do you want posterity to remember again? your family? e Do you wont a portrait you would be in your proud to use for decorotive purposes e Does than have several thousand questionnaires yet tabulate, it seems obvious that most Utahns do not believe we are on the road to economic recovery. Moss said the significant fact about the response to the economic question is that it reflects the feelings of Utahns during the period of late August and the month of September, precisely the time when the administration began telling us that things were going to get better. What this questionnaire is telling me, he said, is that Utahns dont believe the crisis is over . . . they have lost confidence in the countrys leadership in economic affairs. Another response to the questionnaire shows that inflation continues to be the chief concern of most Utahns. Asked to list the major sources of inflation in household budgets, most respondents said food was the number one problem area. Surprisingly, utilities, were listed as second, while the number three and four positions respectively were the cost of gasoline and taxes. Moss said he is grateful that Utahns reponded so well in presenting their views to him. This kind of communication between a senator and his constituents is vital in determining the depth of feeling on our social and economic issues. car or panel truck stops where a group of workmen are gathered. The driver approaches the group saying that he has a special deal on a top brand television set. He implies that these are hot goods or gives some other explanation as to their availability at an unbelievably low price. The prospective victims or marks are then shown a sealed carr ton with top brand name, guarantee and all the other inducements prominently displayed. If the mark is A CONSIDER THIS: O Thursday. Novemler 20, l!7r Wednesday, No ember 10, 1073 photographer. e The Intermountain Professional Photographer's Assoc? named Alan G. Gibby th Photographer of the Year for 1975 on honor bestowed for excellence " photographic ability the finest in the Interrnountam region. Let us show you samples and give you a price brochure. 3680 Wall Avenue - Kmart Plaza Ogden, Utah - Phone 394-1644 V i() ,0 |