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Show THE WASHINGTON COUNTY NEWS, ST. GEORGE. UTAH memerm ppl have t. and NOWJpOft llalua if, ml. Wuun N.w.pp Ilv WOMEN CAN first bfor they can't think they can aea, until they ara fed, and ona need alwaye to hava bad aaougb-turnl- pa and oabbagaa ta aat without troubling about tha getting them. In order to aea anything In them except food. Vra. Wriklna- - Keeps Them Well Fifty years ago there for women, fw. occupations UNUSUAL CHICKEN DISHES . n?chn soft i & 4 housework. und work homo and . UP nursiEj Today there .. very few occupat!; not open to in Today they Tbe familiar forms of tbe usual way of cooking chicken la relieved from monotony by various seasonings. One does not wish tbe character of a dish to be lost by seasonings, but the art of surprising with tbe familiar things Is worth cultivat- factories with 2red women and There are u, women arihit Chicken a la f arengo lawyers, dentists, executives, But all , too often 11? ll Is this dish winch lators. wins her economic Independent was served the great Napoleon after cost of her health. tbe battle of Marengo It so pleased Mrs. Elizabeth Chamberlain v the great man that tbe dish was works in the Unlonall factory ksW overalls writes that she got wond named for the battle. The following results from taking Lydia B p,, Is a recipe which claims the honor: hams Vegetable Compound, chickd Singe and cut up a Chamberlain lives at 500 MonmcJ en as for fricassee. Melt two tableSt, Trenton. N. J. She recommend aud spoonfuls of butter in a saucepan the Vegetable Compound to her w, add three tablespoonfuls of tbe best in the factory and will gladly ans the add Is hot olive oil. When the fut any letters she gets from women asp' dark meat of the chicken and cook for about It If Lydia B. Plnkhams Vegeta" five minutes, then add tbe white meat Compound has helped other with a clove of garlic and salt and why shouldnt it help you! pepper; stir often until each piece minIs well browned about twenty utes. Have ready a tomato sauce made from one can of tomatoes, a slice of onion, a little parsley and celery which have been cooked together until thick, then rubbed through a sieve; add one tablespoonful of butter. To the chickf en add pound of fresh mushrooms which have been cooked In butter five minutes. Arrange the chicken on a hot platter, add to the gravy In the pan three tablespoonfuls of the tomato puree, stir until hot, pour over the chicken and serve. Chicken a la Stanley. Add one large of a onion thinly sliced to chickadd two of young butter, cupful ens cut Into pieces for serving and Dr. Scholls Zlno-pad- s stop all pam cook for ten minutes; add one cupful quicker than any other known stock cook until the chicken and of method. Takes but a minute to quitt the worst corn. Heading starts at meat Is tender. Remove the chicken, once. When the com is gone it never mb the stock aud onion through a comes back. If new shoes make the tablespoonsieve, add one and one-haspot touchy again, a Zmo-pafuls of butter and the same of flour stops it instantly. Thats because nnd cooked together. Season with salt Zino-pad- s remove the ing pepper, serve on a hot platter and rubbing of shoes. the sauce poured around it. Garnish Dr. Scholls Zmo-pad- s are with banana, cut Into diagonal slices antiseptic, protective. At all and fried In butter. Dip tbe banana In druggists and shoe dealers 35c. seasoned flour before frying. Chicken a la Marengo No. 2. Cut the chicken, sprinkle with salt and pepper and dredge with flour. Fry In a little salt pork fat Put Into a stew Put one on the pain is gone pan, cover with the following sauce, nnd cook slowly until the chicken Is can of mushtender. Add one-liarooms cut Into quarters and cook five need not annoy yovu Ponpfo jqzwjsr. beach, on minutes. ara ate. chicken a dupdlcd by the quick Arrange DrigrrS KCvsinf dish and garnish with parsley.-JServ- e by lean, jaded horses, driven by thinly clad, poorly with the sauce poured round tho fed men, who had survived the long siege of Rich-menchicken : We saw the colored men, women and children digging out tho lead and iron which had been Sauce. Cook of a cupful shot into tho fortifications, almost the only support of butter with one tablespoonful of of these wretched people. Visiting cemeteries and church yards, we were deeply touched by the finely chopped onion, one slice of carwithered wreaths and tiny flags that marked the rot, one slice of turnip cut Into cubes. graves of the Confederate dead. In the bleak Add h of a cupful of flour, a March wind and light-fallin- g enow, the desolation dash of of a teacayenne, seemed most oppressive. Returning together to the old Willard hotel, spoonful of pepper, and cook until the where we then lived, sitting in our parlor after flour Is well browned. Add gradually For Indigestion, Dyspepsia, etc. dinner, we recounted to General Logan tho incitwo cupfuls of boiling water and one-hal- f dents of the trip and how deeply touched we were Relieves Distress after Hurried by the devastation and ravishes of war. In the cupful of stewed tomato, cook five Meals or Overeating. Being an around old historic church at minutes, strain and serve. churchyard gentle of foot laxative, It keeps the dPetersburg, every the ground seemed ocSea Foods. cupied by the graves of the Confederate dead. Upon igestive tract working normally. them lay wreaths, once beautiful flowers, now Let us biesk from custhe old away 30c & 90c. At all Druggists. crumbling, which had been placed there by loving hands. Little faded Confederate flags marked each tom that Friday is always fish day. G. G. GREEN, Inc. WOODBURY, N. J. grave, mute evidence of the devotion of the southFish should be served ern people to their loved and loat. General Logan oftener; one may not be was much Impressed by our saying able to have the fresh "The Greeks and Romans In thedescription, day of their glory were wont to honor their hero dead fish In any locality, but by of chaplets First Girl Mary makes me slik laurel and flowers, ss well as In bronze and stone the canned, smoked, Second Me, too. She tries so hjr,l and that as commander In chief of the Grand pickled and salted are to be feminine. Bepubllc and member of congress tJ from Illinois, which he then was. he would issue usually In ordinary maran order establishing Memorial kets; If not, by mail or then Day, called tLtVuTu 1a,v, H deelare1 H the same time express they will be sent ibtelieV,d Mhat n,could secure tbe adoption to any address. Joln,t. making It a national and a Planked ceremony. He then took up aholiday Mackerel. Spanish Spill and paper and wrote the matchless order No. pencil down the back a 11 mackerel, result of this order formal exercises were dust with salt aud pepper and rub held at Arlington, ya. (later the B,te of the pres. thoroughly with salad oil. Lay on an oiled plank, place In a very hot oven A,r,Ungron National cemetery) on May 30, ISOS, principal ceremony being the deeorn-- t for about twenty-fivminutes. Bast on with flags and flowers of the with melted butter and a the Inknown Dead," a memorial monument to frequently few that had of lemon Juice. Remove erected to the memory of 2.1U unidentified been from drops the oven and pipe seasoned dead found on the fields of Bull Bun and the route to mashed potato "round the fish, brush Rappahannock. Tbe day was also observed In with the yolk of egg beaten and run other parts of the country by flowers on I the plank under the gas flame ta strewing the soldiers grates, In accordance with General brown. c Have meat from a half pound Logans order, hut the tern Memorial Day or of cooked lobster, dip In butter and Decoration Day had not yet been adopted. lay around the fish. Garnish with The idea spread rapidly, however, and at the siloes of lemon and parsley. ! ceremonies held by the G. A. B. in Monument Fillet of Sole Marguery. Take Dependable service cemetery In Philadelphia on May 29, 1S75, it was three pound sole, f recorded that the annual floral decoration of thats what counts when W1 pint the cooked shrimp, two graves of our dead soldiers has become a national ttOdespoonfuls of you are responsible custom. For it was doing much to heal the butter, one-hacapful of mushrooms, passengers. carrying one tablespoonful of flour, three wounds of the war and. In uniting to honor 6ure o slices make we And their of lemon and onion, three deed, the North and the South-wer- e day of service stalks forgetting the dependable bitterness of a few short years u1 teaspoonful of ce! One of celery, out by and in day the most significant bits of evidence of this oc- cry salt and two egg Put yolks. stalling Champions. curred In Brooklyn when on the eve of enough water Into a saucepan or fish May 30 1S77. a great throng assembled in kettle to cover the of the Academ-Champion if tht bof t fillets, add lemon Music to hear the chief orator onion, one tab!epoonrul of butter cel-ertpark plug hecaute of the day fill' mat double-ribbeand celery salt; cook ten fd1Kf !!,OS A; ,rrjor- - f,rnrly brigadier tie core a minutes, ,u and construction ( onfederate army. then add the fish; cook till tender but cad analyu electredcf. FToin that time on Memorial unbroken; remove the fish to a platDay celebrations were Increasingly a symbol of a nation Champion X reunited. ter and keep hot over l.nt water, strain Lspeeially was this true of those which followed the sauce, adding another for Ford l tablespoon-futhe Spanish American war. In which sons of men of butter, the shrimp nnd mush60 who had worn the Blue fought and died beside rooms. cover and let cook ten min sons of men who had worn the Gray. And It Champion was utes, then stir In the flour mixed with Cars other of NIomorlHl Day celebrations enough water to make a paste, stir than Fonts since The World war has left America and cook five this add the beaten 75 heritage a Memorial Day of broader and deeper yolks and cookminutes, Just long enough to meaning then It has ever had before. It knows heat through, but tot boll. Add more no North no South no East, no West It seasoning If needed. toe fighting men of no particular war, but honors of all wars. It Is a trumpet call to all Americas to pay reierent tribute to the memory of their bon SparlCPfaSP ored dead-- the AMERICAN Soldier. TOLEDO, OHIO ing. five-poun- By ELMO SCOTT WATSON LL over the world wherever there ere men rind women who claim the privilege of Ametleim citizen- ft sltlp Slay CO will he observed ns 7 the day cm width we honor our soldier dead. For Memorial Day has outgrown Its original significance as a day of remembrance for the men who wore the I.lue and tho'-who wore the Uray ,n tlie Krcuteit civil war In history, the War He tween the States of l to 1865. Americas soldier dead He hurled In many hinds In Cuba, In the Ihlllpplnes, In Mexico and In France, Bel glura nnd England. In the environs of the City of Mexico there U a little cemetery in w hit h a small granite shaft stands, bearing these words: To the memory of the American soldiers who perished In this vuliey In whose hones, collected by the countrys orders, are here buried 750." Memorial Day Is a day of remembrance for those 750 Americana as much as It la for any of the hundreds of thousands whose graves In cemeteries In every state of the Union will be covered with flowers on May 30 of this year, 1037. Since 1018 the worldwide significance of Memorial Day for Americans has been more apparent because of the long rows of white crosses In England and France and Belgium. In a military cemetery at In the e region of France there are 14,045 of these crosses. In the e cemetery there are 5,934; at KL Mihtel, 4,141; In the Ai'me-Mnmi2,212; at the Somme, 1,816; at Kuresnes, 1,506; In Handers Field In Belgium, 305, and at Urookwood, Uugland, 437. So It Is lu remembrance of those 30,502 American soldiers, who are buried In eight European cemeteries, and the 46,214, who have been brought home to rest beneath the soil of their native land, as well as the countless host of the dead heroes of the Civil war, the Indiun wars, the Spanlsh-Amerlca- n and every other conflict In which the United States has ever been engaged, that Memorial Day will be celebrated this year. If there Is any one Memorial Day ceremony which Is outstanding It undoubtedly will be that In the great amphitheater in Arlington cemetery Dear Washington whore Fresldent Cooiidge will voice the nations tribute to its soldier dead. Around him will be grouped high government officials and ambassadors of foreign countries. But it will not be the presence of great men which will make the Memorial Day services there notable. It is the place Itself which Is the Incarnation of the spirit of Memorial Day Arlington cemetery, where stands the memorial to the "Unknown Dead" of the Civil war and where was placed the greatest of all American shrines, the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, Of all natloual celebrations, Americans have best preserved the original connotation of "holy duy for holiday In the case of Memorial Day. Untouched by the commercialism and the materialism which has crept Into the observance of other special days. It has a dignity and a spirituality all of its own. Perhaps the fact that it was conceived In love and perpetuated In reverence has made It so. For It was the touch of a womans hand, laying flowers upon the grave of an enemy perhaps the very one who was responsible for the death of some one near and dear to her , whose example of loving kindness and forgiveness for past hatreds eventually brought about the observance of Memorial Day. In I860 Miss Lizzie Iluther-for- d of Columbus, Miss., suggested to the members of the Ladles Aid society, who had been curefully attending the graves of Confederate dead, that April 26 be set aside each year as a special day for decorating these graves. Her suggestion was at once adopted by the society and on April 23, I860, the first Memorial day service was held In St. Lukes Methodist church In Columbus with Col. James M. Kamsey f4 the orator of the day. On that day the graves of both Union and Confederate soldiers buried near Columbus were decorated with flowers, lu the meantime letters to women in other southern towns resulted In the adoption of April 20 for a general observance of a memorial day for the soldier dead. In t he spring of 1S07 a New Tork newspaper pubished a paragraph In which this brief statement was made, "Tbe women of Columbus, Miss., have shown themselves Impartial In their offerings made to the memory of the dead. They strewed flowers alike on the graves of Confederate and National soldiers." In 1H07 the nation wuh still bleeding from the wounds of the war, and anger, hatred and suspicion were still rife. But this awllon by the women in the South sent a lhr.ll throughout the North and the following year, den. John A. Logan, national commander of the G. A, IL, designated May SO for the pur-fos- e of strewing with flowers or otl erwlse decorsting the graves of comrades. How General Iogan came to Ksue the famous order to his comrades of the G. A. U. which r suited In the observance of May 30 as Mem. .rial Day, or "Decoration Pay, as it was first known and as It Is still often referred to, was related a few j ears ago by his widow, fur many jears known as "The Grand Old Lady of Washington." The riory, aa told by Mrs. Logan, follows; A AaL Out allpain instantly e one-hal- l'-C- 18-1- one-fonrt- b lf cause-press- Romagne-sous-Mont-fuuco- n Meuse-Argonn- medi-cate- Oise-Atsn- e, Tbr lots Col. Charts L. Wilson, tiltor of thj D Scholl's SKIN lf cmz ZHS General Orders No. 11 I Headquarters Grand Army of the Republic, Adjutant Generals Office, 446 14th Street, Washington, D. C. i May 6, 1868. "General Orders, No. 11. "I. The 80th day of May. 1888, Is designated for the purpose of strewing with flowers, or otherwise decorating:, the graves of comrades who died In defence of their country during the late rebellion, and whose bodies now Us In almost every city, village, hamlet and churchyard In the land In this observance, no form of ceremony Is prescribed, but posts and comrades will. In their own way, arrange such fitting services and testimonials of respect, sa circumstances may permit. "We are organized, comrades, as our regulations tell us, for ths purpose among other things, of preserving and strengthening those kind and fraternal feelings which havs bound together the soldiers, sailors and marines, who united together to suppress ths lat rebellion. What can aid more to assure this result than by cherishing tenderly the memory of our heroic dead, who made their breasts a barricade between our country and lta foes. Thetr soldier lives were ths revellls of freedom to a racs in chains, and their . deaths ths tattoo of rebellious tyranny In X arms. We should guard their graves with sacred vigilance All that the consecrated wealth and taste of the nation can add to I their adornment and security. Is but a fitting tribute to the memory of her slain defenders no Let wanton foot tread rudely on sueh hallowed grounds. Let pleasant paths invite the coming and going of reverent visitors and $ fond mourners. Let no vandalism of avarice or neglect, no ravages of time, testify to the present or to the coming generations that we have forgotten, as a people, the cost of a free and undivided republic. "If other eyes grow dull, and other hands alack, and other hearts grow cold la the solemn trust, ours shall keep It well, as long ss the light and warmth of life remain to us. Let us, then, at the time appointed, gather around their sacred remains, snd garland the passionless mounds above them with the choicest flowers of springtime; let ik us raise above them the dear old flag they saved from dishonor: let us. In this solemn presence, renew our pledges to aid and assist those whom they have left among us a sacred charge upon a nation's gratitude the soldier's widow and orphan. "II. It Is the purpose of the commander-ln-chie- f to Inaugurate this observance, with the hope that It will be kept up from year to year, while a survivor of the war remains to honor the tremory of his departed comrades He earnestly desires the public press to call attention to this order, and lend its friendly aid In bringing It to the notice of comrades In all parts of the country In time for simultaneous compliance therewith. "III. Department commanders will use every effort to make this order effective. John A. Logan, "By order of Commander-i- n o'hlef 'Official: N P. Chipman, Adjutant General. I I X Chicago Journal of that day. Invited a party consisting of his niece Miss Anna Wilson (later Mrs Uoratia May). Mips Karrnr, his fiancee (all now dead': General Logan, and myself, to visit the battlefields sround Rclimond In March, 18t8 The Importance of some measures then pending In congress prevented General Logan, at the last moment, from going, but he Insisted upon my going with these friends. We made a tour of every battlefield, fortification, tempon ry barricade and cemetery around the erstwhile Confederate capital, driving about In old tumble-dow- n vehicles, drawn ZS Rssinol d. one-fourt- h one-fourt- one-eigh- th Old-Fashion- ed two-poun- d e Hie Bus Driver -- one-hal- fr lf one-fourt- h y d 7' "'T I 7Wc)h Champion |