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Show Thursday, May 24, 1928 TIIE BINGHAM BULLETIN. BINGHAM CANYON. UTAH 0000000000000000(1)000000000 CThe Kitchen !j Cabinet J oooooooooooooSoooooooo i id liin. WaMern Nwpir Uulon TIt Idea, aharrd by many, that Ufa la a vala of ttara, la Juat aa tain aa the Idea ahared by a great majority, he Idea to which youth and health and rlchea Incllnt you, that lira la a placa of entertain-ment Ufa la a placa ot aervlct, and In that aeivlc on haa to auffer a ureal deal that la bard to bear, but mora ften o xperlenca (rrnt deal of Joy. Hut that Joy can ba real only If people look upon their life aa a aervlre, and have a definite object , In life oujKlite themaelvea and their pernonal happtnena. Tolatoy. CAKE3 AND ICINGS A cuke l a simple thing 'or i"""' cook? to prepare, provided they huve good materials: bill tlif tilling mid Icing lire often the ruinous tl u I 8 li I n g touch. When making boiled trust init It U mo easy to boll It a ruction of time too long, nd ll will be luird, or too short and It will be sticky ot run off the cuke. When occupied with too iniiiiy things, the Icing to make will he an uncooked one and there Is no certainty about It-- Use any plain layer cuke recipe and for an tclng use the following: Mocha Filling. Cream one tabid spoonful ot butter, one cupful of pow-dered sugar and two tnblespoonfuls of cocoa, niolsteu with four tablespoon fills of strong coffee Infusion, adding a little at a time, ad'.'ng more sugai if needed to make of the proper con-sistency to spread. Mapla Sirup Caks. Civam one-hai- r cupful of butter and add one and one-hal- f cupfuls of sirup. Dissolve three-tcurtli- s of a teaspoonful of soda In one-hal- f cupful of hot water, add two well beaten egg yolks and two and one fourth cupfuls of Hour sifted and one teaspoonful of baking powder and one-fourt- h teaspoonful each of salt and ginger, then fold In the sillily beaten whites. When partially cool cover with maple sirup icing. Boil one and half cupfuls of maple sirup until It spins a thread, then pour slow-ly over the stlflly beaten whites of two eggs, beating until thick enough to cover the cake. Dot with halves of walnut meats and cut Into squares when serving. Caramel-Carame- l Cake. To prepare the caramel place one-fourt- h cupful of sugar over the Are In an Iron pnn, add one teaspoonful of water and stir and cook until a rich brown. Tour one-hal- f cupful of boiling water over it and eilr until dissolved. Cream one-hal- f cupful of butter with one fourth cupful of granulated sugar, add two well-beate- n egg yolks and one-hal- f tea-spoonful of vanilla, add two cupfuls of pastry flour sifted with two of baking powder and one-fourt- h teuspoonful of salt alternately with the cooled caramel mixture. Finally fold in the stiffly beaten egg whites. Bake In two layers and put together with caramel icing: Cook two and one-hal- f cupfuls of brown sugar with one cupful of cream to a sft ball stage, add a tableppoonful of butter, tuke from the Ore, add a tea-spoonful of vanilla and bet until thick, spoonful of vanilla and beat until thick. Spread and garnish the top with pe-can meats. Tempting Jellied Dishes. When the warm oays of summer are upon us we will turu to our recipes to find me dishes which whlcn will tempt and refresh us. A jellied dish for sal-ad dessert or fur a main dish Is so easily pre-pared In the early part of the day, and placed on Ice it Is ready at a moment's notice. For osplc Jelly we add gclutlu to seusoned stock, brown or white, or canned bouillon may be used Tht Jelly should tie well seasoned and stiff enough to hold Us thape when turned out Jellied Veal and Ham. Buy a shank ot veal wilt plenty of meat on the bone nhout four pounds. Wash and place the shank on tc stew In a pint of water for each pound and add one-fourt-cupiu. each of chopped carrots, minced onion and d.ced celery, a few sprigs of parsley, a bayleat, one-eight- h teaspoonful of thyme, eight peppercorns and twr. teaspoonfuls of salt. . Cook slowly until the meat fall from the bones. Remove the meat from the nones and cool under weight. Strain tfe liquor through a sieve and cool, remove every bit of fut Clarify b, ndJii-- crushed egfc shells and slightly heaten whites, boil up, then strain through a cheesecloth. Add a little of the veal broth to a bread pan and allow it to thicken. On this pluce sliced veal and ham In thin slices. Cover with more broth and cool; re-pent until uli the broth and meat are used. Chill for several hours and turn from the mold. If the stock seems to lack gelatin "add some to the broth two tnblespoonfuls will be sufficient. Sugarless Icing. This Is a recipe left from the war, but Is as popular as ever: Take a small can of con-demned milk, which will be sweet, stir into It enough cocoa to make a piste of the consistency to spread, adding n bit of powdered sugar If Short ot cocoa or it Is wanted more sweet. Swedish cooks thicken stewed fruit with potato Hour and mold It. Serve with cream when cold. LA ... . .Jz&i MOST people know this absolute antidote for pain, but are you careful to say Bayer when you buy it? And do you always give a glance to see Bayer on the box and the word genuine printed in red? It isn't the genuine Bayer Aspirin without it I A drugstore always has Bayer, with the proven directions tucked in every box: th tnid murk of "aS2a luyer MnufctiiM or Monoaeetlcacldoatar of Ballcylleacld la Pinch, Uac ALLEN'S FOOT-EAS- E for Tlrad Font It Can't Ba Beat At night when your feat XVtta are tired, sore and swollen AvSKfrom much walking or J. ydunclnp, sprinkle two JX AU.ENSFOOT-EAS- E powdera TtfJ In the foot-bat- gently s. rSR. rul) "ie re an( ,n" flamed-- parts and X Y ftvy A re"1'' l"16 magic. ' X U Iy$ 8hake Allen's Feet-Eat- e Vl I vf A? '",0 yur 8Uoes in I iJr tl,e morning and wulkall day In com-- fort. It takes the friction from the shoe. For FREE Sample addrew, ALLEN'S FOOT-EAS- f t ley. N. T. Don't mistake self-conce- for genius WILL DO ALL IT CLAIMS TO DO Mrs.StecIeSaysofLydIaE.Pink-ham'- s Vegetable Compound Tratt, Va. "I waa so weak md nervous that I was in bed most I all the time and jrfjryaw couldn't sit up jStej.S'vjV and I am only gf 30 years old. I E 6aw your adver-- j I azine and after I had taken three zSf M' ,Iose8 of Lyd' K- - Sf'-t- &i Tinkham's Vege- - QTj&V&f taMe Compund fl;r J I could feet that ' rAf$fCrl 1 was better'- - Af bottles I began doing my work and I feel like a new woman. I recom-mend the Vegetable Compound to my friends and say it will do all it claims to do and more. I will gladly answer all letters I recive." Al&S. S. E. Steels, Pratt, W. Va. " DOT! r A ivi 2L. uUr H AS r?7 k ht& ; JS 3" ir! fliS teT J 4 By ELMO SCOTT WATSON I V wlflluSV V fST U OUK more greut Americans were pj; 1 S fx lit I ?7 I honored recently when busts of '4sLL' yJjU" yWj&& S Y&jft them mnde by leading sculp-tors of this country were un-veiled In the Hull of Fame at I Jvil'J'irti New York university on Uni-versity champion of abolition at a time when that move-ment mV t&t'w I heights in New York was far from popular in New Englnnd. TjOiT city. They represented achieve-ment Samuel Finley Breese Morse was the painter. , XVCl: ( In widely different fields Morse was born In Charlestown, Mass., April 27, Cf - of activity for one was a sci-entist, 1791. when a student at Tale he became inter-ested vN? t?3SY another was a poet, an-other In art and upon his graduation In 1810 bo T'5r vfevKV'5!ffi'r a lawyer and the fourth went to London to study under the famous Ben-jamin J" 24ZZ an Inventor. They were Louis Agassiz, John West England hailed him as a potentlully s xJOTtJSt! Greenleaf Whlttier, Bufus Choate and Samuel he returned Boston and Finley Breese Morse and the addition of these four now brings the number of portrait sculptures which have already been unveiled up to 48. So far C3 men and women have been elected to the Hall of Fame and bronze tablets com-memorating their achievement have been placed, but money for placing the busts of the remaining . 17 has not yet been raised. Busts of James Madi-son, Henry Clay and John Paul Jones have been prepared for their niches, but, at the time of the announcement of the plans for this year's unveil-ing, sufliclcnt funds had not been guaranteed to assure the Inclusion of these three notables in the 1928 ceremony. The history of the Hall of Fame. In brief is this: On March 5, 1900, the council of New York university accepted a gift of $10,000. afterward Increaser'. to $250,000, from a donor whose name was withheld, for the erection and completion on University heights. New York city, of a building called "The Hal! of Fame for Great Americans." The hr.Il was dedicated May 30, 1901, when twenty-si- x natlonnl associations each unveiled one of the bronze tnblets In the colonade. May 30, 1007, eleven new tablets were unveiled, ora-tions being given by the governors of New York and Massachusetts. May 21, 1021, twenty-si- x new tablets were unveiled. April 27, 1022, a temporary bust of Gen. U. S. Grant was unveiled by Marshal Joffre" of France. In May, 1922, busts were unveiled of Edgar Allan I'oe, George Washington, Miss Maria Mitchell, Gilbert Stuart and Mark Hopkins. The busts of Robert Fulton and Horace Mann had been unveiled several years before. May 22, 1023, there were unveiled busts of It. W. Emerson, II. W. Beecher, Frances E. Willnrd, U. S. Grai.t (permanent), R. E. Lee, Alexander Hamilton, and Abraham Lincoln. On May 13, 1924, busts were unveiled of John Adams, Rev. Phillips Brooks. Samuel L. Clemens (Mark Twain), Peter Cooper, James B. Eads, Joseph Henry, Andrew Jackson, Thomas Jefferson, William T. O. Mor-ton, and Alice F. Palmer. On May 12, 1926, busts were unveiled of Roger Williams, advocate of religious freedom and founder of Rhode Island; James Kent, chancellor of the state of New York ; Daniel Webster, states-man ; Daniel Boone, explorer and frontiersman ; Jonathan Edwards, theologian; George Peabody. financier and educator; Ell Whitney. Inventer of the cotton gin ; Edwln Booth, actor, and Augustus Saint Gaudens. sculptor. On May n, 1927. the following were honored: John James Audubon, naturalist; William Ellery C'hannlng, preacher and theologian ; Admiral David Glasgow Farra-gut- Civil war naval commander; Benjamin Franklin, scientist and statesman; Washington Irving, man of letters and historian; Mary Lyon, founder of Mount Holyoke college. Massachusetts has good reason to look upon the Hall of Fame nnvellings this year as some-thing of a Bay state triumph, for of the four men thus honored she claims three as native sons and the fourth, a citizen by adoption, sleeps in her soil In the shadow of her great nnlversity. However, there Is something of the irony of fate in the fact that two of these sons of hers, who later became world-famou- did not fare very well at her hands In their youth. She let one almost starve when he was a struggling young pnln'er and she ostracized and virtually drove from her borders the other when he became a great artist, but when to set np his studio his countrymen showed no Inter-est in his pictures. The Inventive genius, which was to make him famous later, was alive even then and in 1816 he and his brother invented an Improvement in a pump for a fire engine. Al-though Ell Whitney, inventor of the cotton gin, and President Jeremlnh Day of Yale were enthus-iastic over the Invention, the public was not. Finally Morse decided to go to New York and continue his career as an artist, and there in the face of discouragement and poverty persisted un-til he gained the recognition which he deserved. Although at the age of forty he seemed commit-ted to an artistic career, he was ptlll interested in invention and in 1832, while returning from Europe, got the Idea for the electro-magneti- c telegraph from a certain Dr. Charles T. Jackson of Boston, who was a passenger on the same ship. Morse perfected his Invention in 1S37 and for the next few years vainly tried to get con-gress to appropriate funds to develop Its use. Success came at last when he had all but nbnn doned hope and when the day came for the off-icial demonstration, the message which was ticked off over the line which led from the United State., senate chamber to Baltimore, 80 miles away, was: "What hath God wrought?" Morse lived to see his epoch-makin- g Invention used nil over the world and when he died In 1872 he carried to his grave In Greenwood cemetery In New York city the greatest honors that the nations of the world could bestow upon him. The story of John Greenleaf Whlttier. the be-loved Quaker poet, the "American Robert Burns." Is similar In some respects to thnt of Morse. He was born December 17, 1S07 at Haverhill, Mass. His youth was one of toil as a farmer boy until a wandering Scotchman, a tramp, struck the poetic fire in his soul by reciting some of Burns' lines to him. Through a devoted sister and the editor of the locnl newspaper, later famous as Wllllum Lloyd Garrison, the prophet of abolition, the boy's verses were published and he was given a chance for better schooling. His contributions to the New England Weekly Review carried his name afar and by 1S30 he was editor of that Journal. But the death of his father took him back to the rocky hillside farm near Haverhill and there he remained for three years. In the meantime the abolition movement was gaining ground and it was a cause which appealed to the young poet. He became secre-tary of the Anti-Slaver- y society and editor of the Haverhill Gazette, which he made nn abolition organ. But abolition was anathema to the New England mill owners and Whltiler was forced to leave the state, as were Garrison and others. After a short time In New York Whlttier went to Philadelphia as editor of the Freeman and there a mob sacked his office and threatened his life. In 1840, lie returned to Amesbury Mass., to make his home and when the slavery issue was raised again after the Mexican war he went to Washington to become editor of the National In-telligencer, an antislnvery paper. When the Civil war ended the question of slavery for all time. Whlttier returned to his home In Massachusetts and the belligerent abolitionist once more became the Quaker poet, desirous to "bury In the waters of oblivion all the bitter things I said In the strife." When the Centennial celebration came in 1876 he was chosen to write the ode which should sing the glories of tie nation on Its' one hundredth birthday. But for all this honor and the many others thnt came to him, he remained the simple poet of the people, beloved by simple people all over the world, and by none more than those of his own state among whom he died on September 7. 1892. The third son of the Bay state who was hon-ored in the Hall of Fame-- this year was Rufus Choate, lawyer, orator and scholar, of whom It was once said, "His personal magnetism combined with his wealth of learning and his strong sense place him among the greatest forensic advocates thnt America hns produced. He may fairly be ranked as the equal of Lord Ersklne." Choate was born nt Essex, Mass., October 1, 1799. While a student at Dartmouth college he wns so strongly influenced by the grent speeth of Daniel Webster in the famous Dartmouth college case that he determined to study law. After his graduation from Dartmouth In 1819 he studied another year In thnt Institution and then entered the law school at Harvard. After a brief time In the office of the attorney-genera- l of the United States he opened his laxv office In Danvers, Muss., and In 18,'iO wns elected to congress where he distinguished himself the next year by a speech on the tariff. In 1841 Choate was elected to the United States senate In the place of Daniel Webster, who had been appointed secretary of state by President Harrison, and soon proved that he wns a worthy successor of the grent orator. Among his most brilliant speeches, which are ranked among the greatest ever delivered In the senate, were those on the Oregon boundnry, the tariff, the fiscal bank bill, the Smithsonian Institution and the annexa-tion of Texas. For the next twenty years he was prominent In natlonnl affairs until his health failed and he died In Halifax, Nova Scotia, July 13, 1ST9. while on a Journey to Europe to seek to regain his lost health. "I cannot afford to waste time In making money," once declared Louis Agassiz and In that sentence he summed. up his lifelong devotion to the ideal that made him one of the greatest sci-entists the world hns ever known. Although he was born in Switzerland, America claims him as her own since he came to this country In 1848 at the age of thirty-nin- e and spent the rest of his life here. At one time Napoleon III of France offered him the directorship of the grent Paris botanical gardens and a s.enf In the French sen-ate, both great honors- - and highly remunerative. 5nt Agasslz's reply was that he found the fauna and flora of this country too Interesting ever to desire to leave it. Nature study was his passion, ne gave eighteen hours of every day to it. "There Is never a moment except when I am asleep thnt I am not joyfully occupied," he once said. "Give me the hours you say bore you and I will receive them as most precious gifts." He cared nothing for money. "I nm not a quarter of a dollar ahead In the world, and never hope to be," Is another of his statements. .And this was made at a time when business began to be a (kid In this country. By his personality and his devotion to sclent he awoke in Americans a greater appreciation for the work of the scientists and he did much to popularize nature study in this country. Airassiz died In 1S73 and his grave In Cnmluidge. Mass.. Is marked by a massive bowlder from the Aar glacier In Switzer-land, where some of his earliest geological studies were carried on. Girl Didn't Quite Get Witty Waiter's Point Wililiim Lclmiun, secretary of the Waiters' and Waitresses' union, re-cently declared before the state Indus-trial coiniiiliKlon of New York that his orgnnlziition tinted the tipping syslem but must put up with It till a living wage for waiters and waitresses was obtained. Afterward, In tin Interview, Mr. Leh-nm- n told a story. "The way girls dres? nowadays," he said, "you can hardly tell them from boys. This holds good In the moun-tains especially, where broad-shouldere-hollow- cheste- girls climb about In knickerbockers and smoke and drink, and even swear. "Well, In a mountain hotel during the summer a girl went to the man-ager and said : "'I want. to make n complaint about one of your waiters. He has been blank Impudent,' " Tin very porrr,' said the manager. 'Whnt did he dot' " 'When 1 tipped him for getting me a box of cigarettes,' said the girl, 'he had the blankety-blan- impudence to say: "'Thank you, lady; you're a gen-tleman." Carvings of Living Men Faces of living men are carved in stone on the new building of the Im-perial Chemical industries, nearing completion at Westminster, England. One of the faces is thnt of the head of the concern, Sir Alfred Mond. All the other carvings are said to be ex-cellent likenesses of many men prom-inent In the chemical world. The sculpture around the building also includes figures of peacocks, which are said to be there as a symbol of Incorruptibility, following the ancient tradition that the flesh of the peacock Is Incorruptible. Ours Did, Too New Cook About those new tum-blers you bought yesterday, nia'm. Mrs. Blue Well, whnt about themt New Cook y tum-bled. Montreal Star. |