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Show SOUTH CACHE COURIER. HYRUM, UTAH eirrqp THIRD YEAR OF WAR SEES SITUATION trian prisoners was announced to be OF IRE ALLIES GREATLY IMPROVED fussy about their r' and assume a personal charge have nerves" and are who get L to piness Your no digestion. controls yoiw body. Hapis health. lmveV men-attitu- SOME DAINTY de Germanys Position Less Favorable Than One Year Ago or Two Years Ago In Principal Theater of War, the West, East COCONUT DISHES. Is so delicious Tie fresh coconut and grated, so peeled when carefully much superior to the dried article, that It should be used more freely when It is In season and may be bought for eight to ten cents. Coconut Soup. Put two quarts of a saucepan, add good white stock Into a half teaspoonful of salt,' one blade of mace, two bay leaves and half a coconut ; simcupful of finely chopped mer gently for one and a half hours, tathen strain and reheat, .adding six a with mixed flour rice of blespoonfuls little of the cooled stock, add two cupfuls of thin cream and serve hot. A half cupful of grated coconut added to a cream pie or to a simple custard, either cup custard or a pie, makes u pleasing change. Coconut Croquettes. Put a quart of milk in a double boiler, stir in a cupful of farina, a teaspoonful of salt, and cook, stirring until thick and well cooked. Add a cupful of chopped coconut, one teaspoonful of butter, three tablespoonfuls of sugar and a half Reteaspoonful of almond extract. move from the fire and let stand over Pour into a hot water 15 minutes. buttered pan to mold. When chilled cut in slices, roll in plenty of fine bread crumbs and fry in hot fat. Drain and serve with a sweet sauce. Coconut Souffle. Beat four eggs until light, add six tablespoonfuls of flour, a teaspoonful of bakiug powder, six table spoonfuls of sugar, one teaspoonful of orange extract, one cupful .of finely chopped coconut and two Mix carefully and cupfuls of milk. turn Into a buttered fireproof dish as soon as it is set, sprinkle with another cupful of grated coconut and two taServe hot. blespoonfuls of sugar. Coconut Filling for Layer Cake. Beat the whites of three eggs until stiff, add (enough "confectioners sugar to make It of the consistency to spread, flavor with a little rose extract aid sprinkle it thickly with fresh grated coconut. f, Fondant stirred thick with coconut, flavored and made into balls, is a very nice confection. Every mans home is his castle; the progress of the Ideal of plain living and high thinking will make a mans home a shrine. , FEW APPETIZING i SALADS. Salads well combined, well seasoned, and well garnished are always a great addition to any menu, Vegetable Salad. Mix well chilled, together cooked string beans, thinly sliced, cucumbers, and shredded lettuce. For the dressing use three tablespoonfuls of olive oil, one tablespoonful of lemon juice, salt, mustard, paprika and red pepper in small quantities, beat with an egg beater and place on ice to chill. Pour over the vegetables just as they are served. Orange Jelly Salad. Dissolve one tablespoonful of gelatin in of a cupful of strained orange juice, and stir over the fire until well heated. Have ready half a cupful of nut meats coarsely chopped. Peel three oranges, divide into sections and cut each section into half. When the jelly is ready to mold, pour a little of it into the wet molds, add some of the nuts, and orange sections, then more jelly until the molds are! full. When ready to serve, turn out on crisp lettuce leaves and top with a spoonful of whipped cream. Pineapple Salad. Arrange slices of canned pineapple on individual plates, place a whole marshmallow In the center with small pieces of marshmallow scattered over the pfneapple, then Put a few cherries around it, and on top of the marshmallow a nut meat. Over the top pour a rich mayonnaise dressing. To make- - the mayonnaise, Put yolk of an egg into a cold bowl, udd a fourth of a teaspoonful of salt, u dash of red pepper, a fourth of a teaspoonful of mustard, beat until thick, then add a half teaspoonful of powdered sugar and a teaspoonful of emon juice, beat well, then add a a me H ve oil. when it is ulck, thin with more lemon Juice or J nugar, adding more 0n untn two nblespoonfuls of lemon juice or vine sr and s of a cupful of Ml are used one-thir- d . three-fourth- 6,432. The offensive was renewed May 25, 9,000 prisoners being taken the first day. On May 26 Italy stated she had taken 22,414 prisoners since May 14. The last operations left the Italians an unfavorable terrain and the Austrians successfully, and Italian Fronts, the Entente Allies Have Shown Inflicting Important losses, but not driving back the Invaders to anY great Decided Superiority. extent. The Italians apparently settled down to organize the conquered In preparation for a new blow. soil New York. Germanys situation at the poorly outfitted and In the Balkans. the end of three years of war appears manian peasants. When trained Routhe third In the Balkans the deadlock conyear less favorable than it did either one of the war opened the buttle of the tinues, but what changes there have year ago or two years ago. Somme was still going on She has to her credit In the last with the French and British vigorously been have favored the allies. At the showing a west end of the lines the gallant Sertwelvemonth the crushing of constantly growing superiority over the bians last winter fought their way Rourrrania and the conquest of foe. Bit by bit through the summer back on their own soil, and with the of that nations territory. and autumn the ground was wrenched help of other troops took lonastir. But In the principal theater of war, from the kaisers men until the coming King Constantine of Greece gave up the west, east and Italian fronts, the of winter smothered the offensive In the forts of Knvala to the Bulgarians entente allies have shown, on the mud and blood, and, according to the and the Germans took about 20,000 whole, a decided superiority to the British commander. Sir Douglas Haig, Greek soldiers to Silesia as guests. central powers. saved his opponents from an Immedi- For this and other acts favoring the In the materials of war the nations ate enforced retirement. great Greece Germans he his throne. lost an have fighting for democracy clearly On September 22 It was now of is new a announced army building up Increasing advantage over the kaisers that the French and British had probably-soo400,000 taken which will men, legions. They have dealt the enemy 55,800 prisoners In the Somme battle be fighting for the cause of democracy blow after blow which have told heav- between 1 and September 18. This under the July leadership of the great paily In lives, if not in territory. total was later considerably Increased. triot, Venizelos. Germany More Desperate. French Win at Verdun. The Italians have Increased their Germanys plight IS rendered more At Verdun, too, the Germans suf- forces In Albania and built excellent desperate than it was on August 1, fered. The French In battles of the communications through the moun1916, by 'the accession of the United fall and won winter back most of the tains, forming a Junction with Sarralls States and several minor peoples to lost In the offensive of the left and securing this end of the Balground the ranks of her enemies. Almost the of 1916 and captured more than kan line. whole world is now lined up against spring 15,000 prisoners, with slight losses When the marshes froze there was that nation. themselves. a sharp Russian offensive last winter Every belligerent dreads another The spring campaign In the west near Riga. Otherwise, the coast front most of winter of war, but Germany all. She lacks many things to face the opened this war with the Germans lay dormant for many months, and back from the great salient during the revolution fraternizing rigors of a cold campaign not only falling directed at Paris was armies. spearpoint confessbetween the rife opposing warm 6hells and guns, but wool for ing thereby either their weakness or Then the Russians, having put their to her run coal sufficient and clothing their aversion to a further offensive, al- house In order, set out to show the rapidly deteriorating railroads and though at the time German writers kaiser that free men can fight better her factories and keep those at home hinted darkly that Von Hindenburg than slaves. of to the not comfortably warm, speak had something up his sleeve. The sectors selected fOr attack lay famine iu the food fats so necessary The strategic retirement began between the Pinsk marshes and the to those facing zero weather. t about March 17, and the Teutons tri- Carpathians, the same as last summer. Looking back on the long truce of umphantly declared It would prevent Successes were scored at; several tlie spring on the eastern front, it is an allied offensive this year. But they points, the prisoners by July 11 numbard to realize that the Russians just too soon. bering 42,000. The greatest advance one year ago were in the midst of a spoke On April 9 the British stormed high was near Stanislaus, from which city splendid offensive much like that Vimy Ridge, taking on this and suc- Korniloffs men advanced across a Which has surprised the world in the about 12,000 prisoners. series of rivers, capturing Halicz and ceeding days present month. In the 1916 drive Brus-silo- The other enemy stronghold along the Kalucz and sabering and bayoneting pushed far within Bukowina and British line was Messines Ridge, south the beaten Austrians. Galicia and crossed the borders of of Ypres. This the British blew up by Russian Drive Pleases. Hungary. He took about 350,000 pris- mines June 7, the noise being heard in come back overThe oners, mostly Austrians, and forced the London. They unexpected 5,000 prisoncaptured find reliamasses of to concentrate the filled allies the Russians enemy ers the first day of the offensive and joyed ble German troops, aided by a few many others later. at home with martial enthusiasm. The Turks suffered severe defeats Turks, to check him. French Gain Hills. The real reason his drive came to a Below the sector of the German re- in the course of the year at several The British splendidly rehalt, however, we know now was lack tirement the French were equally suc- points. of ammunition, failure of transport, cessful. On April 16 they started a trieved their reputation in Mesopotreason within the czars armies and great offensive which resulted In the tamia by recapturing wretched On March 11 they took Bagdad. They bureaucratic inefficiency. dominating Ladles road" falling Into continued several These handicaps seem to have been re- their hands, besides scores of miles furImportant posimoved from the courageous kusco-vite- tions In on and also ther formed a junction Champagne. Their prisoners with Russians northeast of Bagthe perhaps for all time. two the first days totalled 17,000. On Unfortunate Roumania. May 6, along the Aisne, they took 6,100 dad. Roumania declared war on the Teu- captives and gained points from which Farther north the Russians held on tonic powers August 27 and Immedi- they looked down on the foe, as the to their more important gains the ately invaded Transylvania, where the British did farther north. great cities of Erzerum and Trebizond, weak Austrian guards were .easily It should be noted here, however, but abandoned Mush, Armenia, and a pushed back and the important cities that the French losses were severe, large city but thinly settled region to of Hermannstadt and Kronstadt were resulting in the replacement of Nivelle the foe. soon In the invaders hands. Near Jerusalem. as commander In chief by Petaln. The kaiser sent Von Falkenhayn, a out from the Suez canal The last twelvemonth in the Italian Moving splendid strategist just displaced by campaign has witnessed a series of the British inflicted a severe defeat Von Hindenburg, as chief of the great costly reverses for the Austrians, but on the Turks near Romani and then general staff, to command on this the Italians have been prevented from fought their way Into Palestine, front, while Von Mackensen headed following up their successes by the building a new railroad as they went. the Germans, Bulgarians and Turks, very difficult terrain, the beaten Teu- A further slight advance would bring who threw themselves on Roumania tons falling back after each defeat to them before Jerusalem. jThe Turks from the south. new mountain positions most difficult apparently are preparing to abandon The Roumanians proved no match to attack. the Holy City. They have also refor the combination of foes. Skillful Italians Take Gorizia. moved the Jews from the seaport of work by German spies, or the treachOn August 8, 1916, the Italians Jaffa, treating them so cruelly that ery of certain members of their own stormed the stubbornly defended Go- hundreds have died. army, put the Roumanians plans of rizia bridgehead, on the Isonzo river, In Germanys sole remaining colony. campaign In the Teutons hands, it is taking about 10,000 prisoners, and East Africa, converging columns of now divulged. Bucharest fell Decemfollowed this success the next British, Portuguese and French are ber 6, and ten days later all Walachia they the city of Gorlzla and closing in on the remnants of the dewas lost. On December 18 Russian day by seizing the number of their cap- fending army and the kaisers overIncreasing troops took over the whole Roumanian tives. seas dominations seem near eclipse. , front, and a few weeks later the TeuThe Italians launched a new offenAll military observers expect the ton advance was checked .along the sive the first of November and war will continue through the next days line of the Sereth and Danube rivers. on November 5 they announced that winter and the new campaigns are Somme Battle Continues. their prisoners since the fall of Go- awaited with special Interest because ' In the west, however, Germany was rizia totaled 40,365. American troops will have a chance Winter then stifled operations until to show their mettle on the west front. facing a far different problem from In counter-nttacke- d Old Jewelry Made New Aladdin and hi wonderful lamp did scarcely more astonishing things than our expert jewelers do. We can transform your old jewelry Into new, remount your diamonds and make old pieces sparkle In a way that will delight you. Our modest prices make buying easy. BOYD PARK POUNDED IfiOS MAKERS OF JEWELRY SALT LAKE CITY WO MAIN STREET , two-thir- n - ff Kut-el-Amar- a. s, A home should be neither so pretentious nor elegant that it draws ones attention from its owner. v A May 15, when the Italians returned to the attack in the Carso, aiming at Trieste. On May 18 the haul of Aus- v . . SOLDIERS SENT BACK BRIDE Her Effort to Masquerade as a Man to Be With Hubby Didnt Succeed. An Atlantic Port. Somewhere In France is a sergeant In the American army who married just before he left the United States and took his bride with him on the transport. She went as a soldier, dressed In regulation khaki and with her hair cut short The other day the young woman returned from France, her effort to pose as a Sammie having failed. Her husband, it was said aboard the steamship, was in a regiment formerly stationed in Arizona. The vessel also brought, back the body of a soldier who died on the trip over. t . Dogs Rescue Effort Fails. Westfield, Mass. Joseph Wrogow-skseven years old, was drowned In the Westfield river at Red Rock after Ills collie, Fluff, twice tried to bring the boy to shore. brother, Joseph and his y, nine-year-o- ld William, were playing on the bank. Joseph slipped Into the river. The dog plunged in, got the ladlo collar In a firm grip and tried desperately to paddle ashore. The boy dragged the dog under until Fluff was forced to come up for air. Fluff filled his lungs, then dived and came up with his master, but was dragged under again until he had to let go. Arthur Bazata came at the older HEARTY BREAKFAST IS 0. K. French Medical Professor Urges Europeans to Follow Example of Americans. Bordeaux, France. The American breakfast of ham and eggs, liver and bacon, beefsteak or other meat, vegetables and po midge, as a substitute for brothers screams, dived In and the meager European morning meal, Is recommended for France by Doctor brought the body of Joseph to shore. Fluff, who had kept diving desperate- Bergonle, professor of the Bordeaux ly, refused to come ashore until Baza- medical faculty. Doctor Bergonie regards this substita came up with his masters form and tution as one of the reforms most likebrought It to land. ly to relieve the economic situation, by providing rational nourishment and Rooster Acquires Jag. A farmer at Athol, Mass., declares avoiding a great deal o waste. He bases his argument on the fact that his prize rooster having partaken too freely of some preserved cherries that man requires sustenance most at thrown out of a kitchen window, was the beginning of the day when he Is so drunk that he was taken for dead about to make hla effort, whereas In and stripped of his feathers. He re- Europe he takes his principal meal covered from his jag, however. But when his days work Is half through, when he returned to the poultry yard, when he Is half tired out and is inminus his feathers, his hens would not capable of so digesting his meal as to recognize him, and refused to allow give him proper support for the rest of the days work. him to share tM?3oop. BARGAINS IN USED CARS Oldsmobiles, NaGuaranteed first class if wanted by terms running right parties. Write for detailed list and description, Used Car Dept., Randajl-Dod- d Auto Co., Salt Lake City 50 splendid used tionals $250 to $800. condition-ea- sy MEN AND WOMEN. Now Is the WANTFR slHil l a. II time to learn the barber trade. Bar- bers in greatdemand. Special rate now open for 30 days. Only short time required. Yools furnished and commission paid while learn- ing. i Call or write Moler Baber School, 18 Commercial St., Salt Lake City, Utah. SAYS FILIPINOS ARE , LAZY Writer Doubts Whether He Will Ever Work Very Hard to Make thing of Himself, Some- The Filipino strikes me as unbearably lazy, writes Maynard Owen In the Christian Herald. He has had roads built for him, schools run for him, good government and peace secured to him, and an unusual measure of confidence placed In him. He has graduated from almost no clothes Into spotless white, with patent leather kicks," a clean, shirt and a resplendent tie, so that he looks like the swell member of a comedians. He has pair of black-fac- e had sitting-down- " jobs created or discovered for him and has taken with remarkable alacrity, to the habit, just like any other cultured being. ne has learned to speak English very well and has been trained into a really good athlete. But as far as I can see, so far he Is not much changed since the days when he dawdled Into school, followed by a servant to carry his books and Ink bottle. I doubt very much whether he will work as hard or as intelligently to make something of himself and the Islands as Uncle Sam has worked for him. MOST SUICIDES IN THE WEST. Explained by Large Number of Health and Fortune Seekers Who Go to That Section of Country. , The most suicidal city In the United States Is San Diego, Cal., which had a suicidal rate in 1915 of 63.3 per 100,000 people; the least Is Holyoke, Mass.,1 where the rate for the same year wa 8.1, says Worlds Work. In 100 cities the suicide rate for 1915 was 20.3 per 100,000 people. Figures running back ten years show precisely the same order of precedence in different parts of the United States. The eastern states have the lowest rate from 1910 to 1914 it was 16.5 the southern states come next, and then the rate increases progressively as one goes west, reaching the highest rate on the laelfle coast, and especially in California. Certain explanations come immediCalifornia attracts ately to mind. many Invalids, and despondency over their physical condition may Increase the suicide percentage of the state. The Rocky mountain and Pacific states also draw thousands of men who are seeking their fortunes and a large proportion fall In the quest. The East and South are more settled lh their ways, less subject to sudden business and social upheavals, and consequently more the home of steadygoing people. The West is more adventurous and still attracts a considerable number of people whose varying temperaments and varying fortunes might easily explain Its greater tendency to self-murd- er. Solving Solar Heat Problem. Though the problem of utilizing solar heat In place of coal has engaged scientific minds at various times ever since the early part of the seventeenth century, It Is only within the last 15 years that really promising results have been obtained. Today, according to Mr. Ackermann, the problem is very nearly solved, at least where sunshine is plentiful and coal dear. Where, for example, coal costs as much as $17 a ton coal costs a great deal more than that today In Italy It already pays to resort to the latest methods of using the suns rays In the production of mechanical power. The Improved plant tested In Egypt In 1913 brought results ten times as great as any that had been previously obtained. The practical side of the problem is the proper concentration of solar heat. This requires absorbers, reflectors, mirrors, lenses and other apparatus at once complex and extensive. All the necessary apparatus, however, has been greatly simplified by Ingenious engineers, and further simplification Is said to be reasonably certain. Chicago News. |