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Show "4 itfiiVrihftrfrilto ( TIIE PAGE SIX. HERALD-JOURNA- FRIDAY, AUGUST LOGAN, UTAH, L, DEATH RULES TIIE RANGE IN DROUTHS ROUNDUP MILLVILLE right's release. The Rangers refused Finally, however, the Rangers agreed to permit the citizens to give a farewell banquet for That was their unCourtright. DAYS RECALLED doing The citizens gave the banquet at a hotel. During the course of dinner Courtright reached under the ( B I'm if 1 Pteit) table and found two pistols, which FORT WORTH, Tex. -- One of had been p gged there for his conthe prize replicas of the old South- venience west is a picture hanging in the Then he' rose from his place, office of Torn Slack here about rovered the Arizona Rangers, most of It woven one the Wests barked out of the banquet room ttnri'S glamorous end made his getaway on a horse The picture is that of Jim that had been brought for him. down, After things quieted" Courtright, whose clever escape to F'ort made his Courtright from Arizona name a household word here in Worth to resume his duties as an shortlwas career the frontier days His officer Courtright was marshal her at ived, however. He was shot to the time involved. He was highly death by the owner of a gambling of Fort house. esteemed, a favorite V orth. iicfo-- c coming here he allegedly killed a man in Arizona. Arizona Rangers came to Fort Worth to Yellow Hammer Bird take Courtright When they took Drilled Iron Pipe him to the railway station to return to Arizona they found a mob SULLIVAN, Ind. (L'I'i A small citizens gathere! there is The cltizers demanded Cour- t- bird with a beak of "iron were dinner guest Tuesday of Mr. and Mrs Sylvester Anderson of Mendon Mrs Nellie Pearson has spent the past three weeks with relatives in Brigham City. Misa fnrtna flovey spent Sunday in Nibley visiting Miss Mane A mes. Mrs. Nils P, Olson ( , i - ' day Misses Rachel and Ramnoa Hughes of Malad, Idaho, are visiting with their sister and law, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jes-s-o p Mr, J. C. Sorenson of Mendon and Mr. Albin C. Clawson of of Hyrum wore the speakers In sacrament meetang Sunday afternoon. Mr. Clawson also visited Sunday school and gave a very interesting talk. Mr. and Mrs, Cleon Humphrey visited with Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Jorgenson m Logan Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Roland Gallagher and ehlldren of Salt Lake City, and Mrs. Spencer Young and family of Boise, Idaho, are guests of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. James P. Olson. The following program was given by the Primary In the ward chapel on Sunday evening: Devotional music, Mrs. Rozella Garr; C. Humphrey; prayer, Walter aong, "Welcome to All" by the Merle recitation, entire Primary; Hale; song, Thais Nielson; retold Btory, "Honesty," Cyril Garr; song by Rhoda and Clarice Anderson, on the piano by accompanied recitation, Anderson; Lucinda Jule Hill; song, enrol Jean Hum"Trail of the Piophrey; story,Nauvoo to Salt Lake neers from valley, by Frances Nielson; song, prayer, Bless the Children; Charles C. Anderson. There were brother-in-- See Our Seeds EVERETT, Mass. (U.E taken from King Tuts tomb are the attractive for responsible sweet ppea plot in Charles W. Benton's backyard. A relative in Sweden, fearing to the plant the seeds because of sent curse of the Pharaohs, Benton. them to It is estimated that the seeds are at least 4,000 years old. Inexpensive meals possible. The appetite mands less substantial food and the markets offer vegetables and milts at minimum prices. Whatever Is most seasonable should be the basis ot the dinner. Plenty of vegetables, a little meat and a dessert and the menu Is complete. A stuffed vegetable dinner furnishes an interesting meat flavor with little or no tax on the food allowance. Its amazing how many vegetables lend themselves to interesting concoctions with well seasoned stuffings of meat or nuts or cheese combined with bread crumbs, macaroni or rice. Cabbage, eggplant, tomatoes, green summer cucumbers, peppers, squash, potatoes and onions are nourincreased attractive and of ishment when served stuffed and baked. Stuffed Eggplant r One eggplant, I cup meat or lish, 1 teaspoon salt, 4 teaspoon pepper, 2 tablespoons butter, 2 tomatoes, 1 2 cups breadcrumbs, 2 teaspoon minced onion. Cut eggplant in half. Cook In boiling salted water until tender but not soft. Remove center, leaving as thin a shell as possible without danger of breaking, and chop flesh. Add meat, salt, pepper, tomatoes which have been peeled and coarsely chopped, minred onion, 1 cup bread crumbs and butter which has been melted. Mix lightly and moisten with one or two tablespoons hot water if necessary, but remember the will furnish considerable moist&re. Fill shells with mixcover with remaining crumbs ture, 2 319, ! ADVERTISEMENT On Page 1, Section 2 Allens Ladies Store i 25C J (if tber 9cde ar fortunate In that thry enjoy both ou may be missing pleaMiig sen ice and pleasing prices. a lot In food buying satisfaction and might not know it our store for a time or two. until you try Biscuit Flour OQc G. A. PKG. 1 , .! Peanut Butter LBS. Dandy 1 Spaghetti L G. A. .. Sliced Beef z. rsy"DEL MONTE 2'2-o- IGA z. Tomato Juice Undiluted 15 OZ. 5c CANS X DEL MONTE Catsup Best Grade OZ. 14 BOTTLE .. 14c c UAl?hTYBA 10 POTATOES RED lbs. Corned Beef I.G.A. Can z. DEL MONTE Pineapple Fancy Crushed AwCjjl NO. 10 -M- EATS-FRUIT5-VEGETADLES( TINS frOnge ocuvERY3Sn,ar' PHONE 72 PHONE 73 : - DEL MONTE Salmon Posts White King OQc Soap, 5 bars Health and Skin Postum PKG. Coffee Chase & ... Sanborns Dont Sample! to try our delicious Salad Dressing. flavor will surprise (Dated) Tea ... Tender Leaf.. Tea 1 Tender Leaf, DEL MONTE Corn QUART BOTTLE S'j-O- 12 FLOUR W IPfl&ft fail IGA 250 THOSE DELICIOUS VEAL PATTIES FOR SATURDAY PORK STEAKS, POIND Ground Beef Prime Rib PfWND It W IU Pass Your Inspection Pot Roasts cc Fresh Country Stylo gc POT ROAST ... lb.gctogc 12 Shoulder Cuts! - y::: PORK ROAST VEAL ROAST A Real Bargain lb. 1 11c Ib. BACON SQUARES, Ib. j nni i PORK & BEANS 2q CAN H J m & EunmKal IBeeS FiMlott inmgimoim 6c ft Lb. m Lb. Lb. Extra Special & & i Tenderloin Steaks LB. ... VWWWWWWWVWWWavV WwwWf Qr D Our Beef is Young Heifer Quality and Net Cheap Ccw. Fresh Finnin Haddie and Kippered Salmon. ... The Finest Se'ection of U. S. Inspected Lunch Meats! SPECIAL: CALVES LIVER 20 LB. MMBWH ! III ! ... i lb. 1 Local Young Bigs FRESH BACON ' Ii8. Here Is Where You Save Money! POIND IiNUi and Meat) 2 07c VEAL RIB - BREAST, lb. Lamb Chops 1 fl U POlND 32ZSSZ PORK SAUSAGE POI ND Rolled and Boned! ! lbs. Lean and Tender W POUND Rolled and Boned! All Lean Beef! 2 SPRING FRYS 13c MEATS Fancy Heifer Beef IBonHSims EB2ft iDr The you! OZ. CAN 1.59 ; Short Rib Beef 10' !!? HITE ROSE - BESTI&3lStl QUALITY I.G.A. QUALITY MEATS Beef Steak Kernel WhQle Salad Dressing lb. 18c c ... PKG. Cereal TALL CANS ... PKG. Powder Fancy Red Three blends of the best coffee in the world! Ground while you wait and suitable for the pot, percolator or drip. RED A ...... Ib. 21 Ib. 25 BLUE G lb. 29 PEAK Bran Flakes 59c . L tSa'r,rTK COFFEE! 17c 5 11 gc BUY FRESH GROUND 2 FOB 37(j 3 Coffee Qc Can OCc ' 30C I'AN.S have a stock of the best on the market! 97 j . Now is the time to buy this delicious fruit. We Cheese, 2 for pQc Pabstett rURE VINEGAR ' ZowWWWWUMWIlWIWMMMWIMSW ; . V6 for MILK Cantaloupes PKG. td Our customers Corn Flakes Gold Toast ,59S,7iOOOOeOOO FLIES IN ONE SUMMER othtr insert re the most dancer ous thin that get in your home. They spread disease and death. Guard your health against these vile matures. Kill Inals t on them with F LYTO X 406 the tcnuia Fife, atoaqitoc Fresh LB. CRFAMfORBMXR TWO FLIPS spring lire) will their nd Super Vacuum Packed -- K! EXTVQ 1 pm?1 c0 t Service That Is Pleasing FOUNDS Estate ) GROCERIES Miami rt Coffee MUNCIE, Ind. UJi One Washington township farmer is convinced of the power of prayer. He hesitated to set out his tomato plants during the midst of & drought, having seen his neighbors' plants wither in the heat. He prayed for rain and started setting out his plants. Before he had finished, rain fell iu i Sullivan's latest contribution in the worlds oddities. a beard Recently when she m her of a noise cirillmg-sostove Mrs. I. H. Halley discovered a large yellow hammer using its beak to bore its way out. the find Before she could source of the noise and extraot the bird, it had drilled a hole to the back of the stove the size of a dollar. DLL MONTE 1, left-ove- ' market market Tomorrows Menu de- Sweet Pea Seeds From King Tuts Tomb Grew L Hogs hKA Htrtice Watt Writer In summer are PARTICULARLY :N PEANUT BUTTER Receipts, 553; Los Angeles Pomona packers 130, looks about steady on few good butchers and packing BREAKFAST: Chilled apsows; choice butcher hogs absent, ple sauce, cereal, cream, crisp eligible to $5.10; few good 190 to broiled bacon, muffins, milk, 210 pound butchers $5 10; bulk coffee. packing sows, 33 000(3 25; light LUNCHEON: Hot bouillon, smooth sows on butcher order summer vegetable salad, bakeligible to 33 79. ing powder biscuit with raspCattle Receipts, 803; Included tea. milk, berry jam, 15 drouth directs, 300 cattle, DINNER: Fruit cup, stuffed calves; drouth directs to Portland eggplant, creamed radishes, IOs Angeles market 28; quopineapple and cabbage salad table steady on small salable supwith pimento dressing, pears ply; good grass and fed steers eliwith chocolate sauce, milk, gible to 4 50; very few offerings coffee. of heifers and cows; good rows few good 32.50; quotable to butcher bulls, $2 80f weighty and dot with bits of butter. Put 2 85; vealers and calves absent. Omaha Sheep Receipts. 8666, into a buttered diBh and bake 30 minutes in a moderate oven (S7S market 2991, Chicago packers 1121; generally steady; ,ew 86 degrees F.) lambs 34 50 pound local trucked-i- n Stuffed Cucumber ft 5 80; late Wednesday 4 loads Two large cucumbers, 1 cup good 78 to 80 pound Idaho slaughcooked rice, 2 cup cooked mush- ter lamba. 35 85 ; 2 loads medium rooms, 2 tablespoons butter, 1 ta- killer lambs, 34 40W 4 50 ; 2 loads blespoon minced parsley, 2 tea- 68 pound feeding lambs, 35 20; spoon salt, 8 teaspoon pepper, few good slaughter ewes, 32 00. 8 teaspoon celery eppper, milk to make moist. Will Ohioans Pare encumbers and cut la Establish halves lengthwise. Scholarship Scoop out seeds and sprinkle Inside with MANSFIELD, O. (U R) The bulk of the late estate of 3200,000 the ten stand salt. Invert and let minutes. Combine rice, mush- Capt. Ralph M. Yardley, former rooms, melted butter, parsley, Mansfieldian, and Chicago archirecently in San salt, pepper and celery pepper and tect, who died toward establishadd milk enough to make mixture Diego, will go a of ment perpetual scholarship moist enough to hold together. Fill cucumbers, with mixture and fund for Mansfield high school cover with buttered crumbs. Put graduates, under terms of his will hare. into a buttered baking dish, add filed in probate court estate after Balance of the a few tablespoons water and bake of in 320,000 bequests, payment in a moderate oven for forty-liv- e be applied to the fund, to will minutes, until cucumbers are ten- be created In memory of Yardleys der. Serve with tomato sauce. Straub Mrs. Elizabeth mother, You can stuff and bake carrots, Yardley. Interest from the fund too. Bake them covered until Will pay college tuition and gentender, then remove the cover and eral expenses annually of one boy brown the tops of the stuffings. - and one girl, otherwise unable to alford higher education. BY MARY E. DAGUE Rain Saved Plants DRESS i MEN0S&MMLY Farmers Prayers for Sensational SALE Bones of thousands of cattle bleaching on the range In southwest and midwest states offer a ghastly testimonial of the Intensity ot the drouth which bat gripped those sections for months. Great herds have been wiped out by bunfcer and thirst and hundreds of cattle have been shot to relieve their agony. Here la, a scene on the range near Erlcb, Okla., wttl cattle lying dead on the scorched grass four Primary stake officers present and eaih gave a few closing remarks. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Hale of Phoenix, Arizona, and Mrs. Ellen V. Hale of Logan spent Friday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Hale. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. E Scott and family motored to Morgan on Sunday and spent the day visiting Mr. and Mrs. Rulon Scott and family. Mrs. Harry Hoodless visited in Logan Tuesday with her daughter, Mrs Jesse Dailey. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ross and son, Alton, of Alberta, Canada, were guests during the week of Mr. and Mrs. Alma Jensen. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Neves had as their guests during the week Mr. Vernon Neves and Mr. Bill Kenney of Salt Lake City. Mrs. them Olive Neves accompanied home after having spent the summer here with relatives. Mrs. Rhoda Theurer and daughter, Elaine, of Providence, visited with Mrs. Ronald Olson on Tuesday afternoon. A number of people from this community attended the tent show in Providence Monday and Tuesday nighU Mr. and Mrs. Eslie Jensen and family returned home Sunday evening from a trip to the Yellowstone National park. They report having had a very enjoyable trip. The Gleaner Girls met at the home of Miss Iota Humphrey on Tuesday evening. A social everening was enjoyed and light freshments were served. 1 OLD WILD .WEST r Mr. and Mrx diaries Anderson and family and Mrs Lewis left on Saturday tor Idaho halls to visit with Mr. her daughter and end Mrs Conrad YVinhorg Mr and Mrs Vern Hovey and daughter. Va Loy e .attended the Heber Olson family reunion held at the Olson home in North Logan on Sunday. Mrs. KozelU Gtirr accompanied her parents, Mr and Mrs. Charles Gunnell of Logan, to Pocatello valley Friday, where they spent the day visiting with relatives. Miss Mildred Izatt of Logan was the house guest of Miss Verda Hulse Friday and Saturday. Mrs Hazel Hovey visited In Logan Thursday with Her daughter, Mrs. Eltha Heading. Mrs. Etta D Jensen, who recently underwent an operation at Logan hospital was brought home on Thursday. Miss Uldine Pearson was hostess to the Cooking club at the home of her parents on Thursday was The afternoon afternoon. spent in working on their books and in outdoor games. Light refreshments were served to Mrs Jennie Hovey and the Misses Dorothy Clifford, Connie Wlnberg, Lucinda Anderson, Verda CUftord, Virginia Peterson, Iola Jensen and the hostess. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Dailey and family and Mrs. Renee Dailey of Logan and Mr. and Mrs. John L. Hoodless were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hoodless Sun- 1D34. 3, IP? Efo(G (DSl Salad Dressing J QUART FOOD STORES A SURETY OF FURITY- - I 1 22c k. |