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Show THE RICH COUNTY REAPER, RANDOLPH, UTAH Airplane Carriers Well Protected s Farmer Kills 273 Snakes in One Day s , ((c). j ' - ' ' 1929,'Western Newspaper Union.) He Is a friend, who. can By a look, word, renew The courage In a man, ' , His best and true." GOOD. THINGS ' - . Here is a good southern sponge cake from the land of good cooks : Georgia Sponge Cake. Beat three eggs and one cupful of sugar for ten minutes, then add one cupful of flour sifted with one of teaspoonful teabaking powder and spoonful of salt ; add of a cupful of cold water and a teaspoon-- ; ful of flavoring. Bake in small fluted tins and serve piled high, with sweetened whipped cream to which chopped candled cherries have been added. Butter Frosting. Take one and f cupfuls of confectioners sugqr, add three tablespoonfuls of butter, mix well and add thick cream enough to make of the right consistency to spread, flavor with vanilla and cover the cold cake. . For those who consider chicken livers the great delicacy they are, the following dish will be considered : Chicken Livers With Olive Sauce. Cut the livers into half and wrap each piece in wafer-likstrips of bacon, place on skewers alternately with mushroom caps which have been carefully cleaned and dipped into olive oil. Place the skewers across a dripping pan in a very hot oven or under the broiler flame. Baste occasionally with the fat from the pan. Serve on the skewers with the sauce made as follows: Brown two tablespoonfuls of butter with two of Worcestershire sauce, one dozen stuffed olives, thinly sliced, one tablespoonful of lemon juice, salt, cayenne and paprika to taste. Serve with browned potato balls, small string beans or peas. Corn Bread or Johnny Cake. Beat one egg, add one cupful of sour milk, teaspoonful of salt, one cupful each of yellow corn meal and wheat flour and one tablespoonfuf of soda. Mix the dry ingredients and stir into the liquid. Add two tablespoonfuls of melted shortening and pour into a hot greased pan and bake minutes. twenty-fiv- e , destruction. First, he tackled the dens of rattlers. They occupied a group of abandoned prairie-doholes, S and by a little ingenuity the reptiles were brought to the surface and killed. With a total of 208 rattlesnakes to his credit from this expedition Willis next turned his attention to the blue racers. They lived In separate compartments from the rattle- snakes, but they also had pre- - j , one-four- th boles. When empted prairie-do- g he had finished the days work Willis had slain 63 blue racers. one-hal- - e, one-ha- lf Good Home Cooking. There is no more appetizing dish for a- - main dish than the good pot roast when cooked until brown and tender and served with vegetables added to it. Pot Roast. Take of pounds the four beef from chuck or rump, wipe with a damp cloth and add three tablespoonfuls of dripping to a deep iron pan. When hot add the meat and brown it on both sides. Sprinkle with salt and pepper, using three tablespoonfuls of chopped celery leaves and two cupfuls of boiling water. Cover tightly and cook for two hours very slowly. Now add six carrots, six turnips, six potatoes, more salt and pepper to season,' cover and cook until Here is the first photograph taken of the guns and gun turrets on the the United States navys big airplane carrier. The guns In the foreground are the latest antiaircraft armament developed by the navy, and have an effective range, almost straight up In the air, of more lhan four miles higher than any plane would fly. Lexington, bomb-droppin- g one-ha- Skylines Upset by Travel in Air Architecture of Cities to Change With Growing Use of Plane. Washington. A few days ago a factory chimney, 150 feet in height, was dynamited and brought crashing to the ground. The reason was that the towering spire was located near the site of the new airport of Newark, N. J., and that its presence was a menace to navigators of the air seeking to make Bird lovers a landing on the field. took especial note of the fact that the chimney, a rather old one, had for long been the home of a large number of chimney swifts and of such other birds as nest in lofty places. Their convenience was sacrificed to who especialprotect human Into the struccrash at night, might ly ture in seeking the ground. The Incident sharply emphasizes what influence the development of flying, especially of the establishment of regular commercial air lines, is having and is going to have on the architectural features of cities, particularly in the neighborhood of municipal airbird-me- n ports. When the airplane first was beginning to demonstrate Its potentialities, a favorite subject for Illustrators of Imaginative stories was the possible appearance of cities of the future when navigation of the air should beFor thd come a matter of course. most part the drawings portrayed vast and lofty edifices with landing platforms on top of them and with all manner of aircraft landing and taking oft. They were reminiscent of the fantastic pictures which nearly a generation ago depicted in Sunday newspaper supplements the adventures of Little Nemo on Mars. Then, general navigation of the air seemed about as far distant in time as Mars Is in space. h one-eigh- th lf two-third- Acidity The common cause of digestive difficulties is excess acid. Soda cannot ij! Five Blind Brothers Noted for Optimism Ashland, boys" here Ohio. The Hamilton are known for their in- dustry, optimism, happiness, and cheerfulness. Ordinarily persons with these qualities would command but passing interest, but the three boys and his brothers, Will, Earl and Frank are meeting lifes problems under a severe physical handicap, the loss of their sight. sixty-thre- -- one-fourt- jp . the vegetables are tender. Thicken the gravy and pour over the meat For the gravy take three tablespoonfuls each of flour and cold water, mix of until smooth, add, milk, salt, celery' salt and pepper to season. Pour into the gravy left in , the pan and cook, stirring constantly Dreams Coming True. until thick. But the fantasy has come. It has , Pear Salad. Arrange eight halves turned Into reality. Plans already in lettuce cups. Mix one have been drawn for a building to , of .pears ' cupful of cottage cheese with constitute one of the many airports cupful of nuts, form into balls for New York city. They call for a and press one into each cavity of the structure 850 feet in height Nothing pear. Dot with cherries and serve which Little Nemo encountered could with a highly seasoned french dress- be more fantastic. The building would ing, using pineapple juice with a dash be a cylinder rising from the groun,d. of lemon. The lower floors would be occupied Prune Nut Pie. Prepare a baked by stores. There would be business offices in various parts of it, auditopastry shell and fill with the following: ; Mix five tablespoonfuls of flour riums and many other features whicn with cupful of sugar and large modern structures have. Other teaspoonful of salt Add one floors would be given over to hotel accupful each of milk and prune juice, commodations and, atop of all, an two egg yolks and cook over a slow enormous landing field 1,000 feet In fire until thick and creamy. Add one diameter. teaspoon ful. "of lemon extract, Runways for landing and taking off cupful cooked prunes, chopped, would be provided so that more than of a cupful of broken 40 and planes could be either alighting or nut meats. Beat for a minute, then taking flight at the same time. Rising fold in the stiffly beaten whites of the yet above the roof would be a mooreggs, pour into the shell, cool and ing mast for dirigibles. This is hot a chill. Whipped cream may be used if dream of Little , Nemo. , Architects desired. and engineers actually are working on Wash bacon dripping, allow to cool the final plans and the project of and skim off. Use for all sorts of financing the project Is occupying the ' cookery. When the bits of burned time of skilled men. bacon drop into the water and sink The Department of Commerce has to the bottom of the pan, it leaves listed 1,000 cities and towns which the fat sweet and it can be used for have arranged for the construction of shortening for molasses or spice cffkes airports and has in its files corresponinstead of butter. dence relating to plans of' another 1,000- places looking' forward to the same sort oi enterprise. It appears certain that architecture ul g i one-eigh- th , Obar, N. M. What better time to clear his farm of snakes than St. Patricks day? James Willis, who lives ten miles north of here, previously had located dens of rattlesnakes and the habitats of blue racers and, on the natal day of Erins patron, he fared forth on his mission of jj obo6oo6ooooooooooocxxxxxx)o $ s one-thir- d . 1 - will be greatly affected because two types of field are to be built. One for large cities, would partake of the nature of the vast building already deThis would be necessary to signed. obtain sufficient space for ports anywhere near the centers of such cities as, for example, Chicago, which is many miles from one extremity to another. The time gained by flying would be lost in transmission of mail and transportation by other means of passengers from a suburban port to the center of town. So, for the large cities, the present generation may fully expect to see municipalities resembling something more fantastic than any castles in Spain or dreams of a hasheesh eater. Change In Skylines. The second type Is to be employed by lesser communities. They will be on the ground. But, here, too, the architecture of the cities must be It will not be convenient to changed. have tall buildings in the neighborhood of the fields and thousands will be razed. So the skylines of American cities of the near future will take on entirely new aspects. The great cities will have spiring peaks higher than any of the surrounding buildings, while the smaller places will have skylines revealing depressions from the general level, the effect being undulating. Practical aspects of construction are not being neglected. A plan has been worked out and has received the approval of Postmaster General New, providing for plane facilities slightly resembling the scenic railways, or shoot the chutes of amusement parks. For planes taking off there will be Inclined runways down which they will travel on their wheels or skids and then soar off Into space. For landing planes similar runways will be built The plane will land on the. level but the runway, being built to incline upward, will speedily bring It to a halt These facilities will con serve space and enable a field to accommodate more planes. Airport engineers and architects already have drawn plans for such ports and have made models giving a clear visual idea of how they Will appear. One of the greatest problems of any great constructing enterprise is that of finance. But it seems unlikeiy that difficulty , will be encountered there. Some municipalities have donated land for ports; some locations have been purchased. Four hundred cities and towns already are listed as having airports. Most of these have been built in the last 18 months and a competent estimate is that $300,000,000 has been expended upon them. Existing plans call for the expenditure of an additional $300,000,000 in the next 12 months with the rate augmenting every succeeding year. The investment bankers of the country are friendly to airport projects and we are expecting to handle large bond Issues to take care of their cost, for they believe they will be profitable. Excellent authorities have declared that the country Is due for a tremendous investment in real estate enterprises and the construction of airports would come under this head. Local governments also may be expected to contribute money subsidies. e, Visitors at the Hamilton home, however, would not, at first glance, detect their plight They would see three men performing household and outside duties like normal persons. Will, the eldest of the three, is the housekeeper. And a good one, too. He learned to bake, sweep and scrub make beds and sew the floors,-wasfrom an excellent teacher his mother. He has become a veteran in the kitchen, even boasts he has never taken food off the stove until it was A fork in sensitive fully cooked. fingers does the work. Asked how he gets along with the washing, Will said he just scrubs until he Is certain the clothes are clean. Earl takes care of the vegetable garden and Frank plays chambermaid to the chickens. That Is, when they are not at the Ashland Malleable company plant unloading cars of coal and iron. Earl and Frank are the supporters of this unique Ashland family and they never yet have disappointed the grocer, milkman, landlord, clothier, etc., the first of the month. Two other brothers, Joe and Harry, also are blind, but they live in other parts of the state. The latter, who is married and has a family, operates a popcorn and vending confection wagon. He, like his brothers, carries on contented with his lot in life. Specialists are at a loss to determine the cause of their blindness, which came suddenly in all five cases. alter this condition, and it burns tho stomach. Something that will neutralize the acidity is the sensible thing to take. That is why physicians tell the public to use Phillips Milk of Magnesia. One spoonful of this delightful preparation can neutralize many times its volume in acid. It acts instantly; relief is quick, and very apparent. All gas Is dispelled; all sourness is soon, gone; the whole system is sweetened. and reDo try this perfect member it is just as good for children, too, and pleasant for them to take. Any drug store has the genuine, prescriptions! product. anti-aci- Phillips Milk . of Magnesia For Barbed Wire Cuts h, LENFANT MEMORIAL d, Try HANFORDS of Myrrh Balsam Aden iitkerinl are All to refund your money ter the firet bottle ii not luited. IBiSi on anklej' hock, stifle, knee, or throat is cleaned off promptly by Absorbine without laying up horse. No blister; no pain; no hair gone. At druggists, or $2.50 postpaid. Describe your case for special instructions. Valuable horse book S free. 8-- A satisfied user says: Colt's knee swollen four to five times normal size. Broke and ran fjr two weeks. Now almost welLAbsorbine is sure great. FA'BS.O.RBlNa ; I W. F. YOUNG. Inc. 510 Lyman St.. Springfield. Wsss. 1 Lemon Production Chinese type of cold resistant lemon tree has been introduced in the Satsuma orange belt of Alabama and Mississippi with excellent results. It is slightly less hardy than the Satsuma orange, but has a more rapid recovery when nipped by the cold. In the Carriere, Miss., section trees which had passed through the coldest weather in 20 years bore as many as 50 fruits in the second year and trees 6 years old have matured over 3,000 fruits each. A a thermometer can be temperamental. There are some that you Even never have faith in. There is danger of taking the world and of taking it too lightly. too seriously; WORTH WEIGHT. JjJOLO" Verdict of Woman Who Tried Pinkhams'Compound or It hurt me to walk Tully, N. Y. sit down without help and I felt sick and weak. mother-in-laMy took Lydia ' E. Pinkhama Vegetable Compound and she Induced me to take it. I am now on the fourth bottle and have also used Lydia E. Pinkhama Sanative Wash. The medicines that will do for me what the The model of the central figure In the proposed memorial to Major Pierre Charles LEnfant, an engineer on General Washingtons staff and chief designer of the city of Washington. That the memory of Major LEnfant be perpetuated Jn marble and bronze is the desire of fourteen of the more important patriotic societies in America and they have joined together to erect the memorial. Vege- table Compound and Sanative Wash have done are certainly worth their weight in gold. I think I have given them a fair trial and I expect to take two more bottles of the Vegetable Mas. Charles Compound. gan, R. F. D. 1, Tully, N. Y. Mor- . |