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Show YOUNG VICTIMS OF THE GREAT WAR UTAH STATE HEWS It Is probable that put to work on the roaj jounty this winter. The bank clearings November, 1913, will exceei clearings of 1914 by 19 a while the increase over F, i ' Tt I too common with all of u (but In the nature of a weak It M mind) to be overawed by line clothe and tine furniture. Dli kene. HELPFUL SUGGESTIONS. on your present blesslnss, of which every man hai many not upon your pBHt misfortunes, of which all men have some. per cent. Threats to blow IU-fle- Whats son by. a name for? To know a perDickens. Rim of World. shrlhk or become yellow If washed In water as hot as the halid can bear It, and use plenty f soap, rinse thorough ly and bang out In any kind of pleasant weath- er. The trouble with ... flannels many times Is that they are not washed thoroughly or not rinsed well. Plenty of hot suds Is the secret. Salsoda Is cheap rnd should be used In hot water to flush all pipes at least once a week. It removes the grease from the kitchen sink drain, and keeps it cleafl. Carrot, that wholesome vegetable which is so lltte appreciated, will have one more gbod way to serve It the following is tried: Put carrots through a meat chopper, then cook In boiling water until tender, salting to ward the end of the cooking. Drain and add butter, a dash of cayenne and a little lemon Juice. Serve with a roast of any kind and see how your family will enjoy the dish. Put candles to be used on the din n er table Into the Ice chest or out of doors In winter to freeze; they will then burn without dripping. 1 In roasting spare ribs it cider Is used to baste the meat Instead of wa ter, the flavor will be more delicious. Many laundresses, espe dally In the winter, iron their table linen right from tbo wringer, using warm water for rinsing. This saves the wear of linen and the dampness gives It Just' the right stiffness. AJien It Is necessary to use oranges for slicing, peel off the thin yellow peeling and put the oranges away to dr for an hour or two, ben the white part will come off easily, leaving the orange clean and ready for slicing. Thin slices of banana placed between slices of buttered brown bread and placed In the oven until the bread is toasted will make delicious hot sandwiches for an Invalid, especially, although well people will make them disappear more quickly. a THE WINTER BERRY. Cranberries are so well liked and are so appetizing served In different ways that a few ways to them, will not come amiss. When you want something pretty as well as delicious serve with your roust the following sherbet. Cranberry Sherbet Cranberries should be carefully looked over, ancj after cooking put into glass or stoneware to mold. If one cares to have them strained they may be put through a sieve as soon as they are cooked, then mold In any destred form. For the sherbet take four cupfuls of stewed cranberry Juice, add the strained Juice of six oranges and four cupfuls of sugar; freeze until mushy, then add the whites of four eggs beaten stiff, and finish freezing. Cranberry Frappe. Doll a quart of cranberries and two cupfuls of water sene tor ten minutes. Strain through a cheese cloth, add two cupfuls of sugar and boll until tho sugar Is thoroughly dissolved. Add the strained Juice of two lemons and If It seems too tart add more sugar. Freeze to a muBh and serve In sherbet cups with roast turkey. Cranberry Pudding. Put a quart of berries on the fire to stew with sufficient water, drop small spoonfuls of batter over the berries, when they begin to i boll cover and steam for 20 minutes. Serve with sugar and cream. jMake the batter by using a cupful of .flour, a half teaspoonful of salt, a beaten egg and half a cupful of mttk. Drop by teaspoonfuls on the boiling berries. Cranberry Conserve. Pick over five pounds of berries and chop them rather coarse. Add two pounds of raisins put through the meat chopper, the rind of four oranges which has been cooked until tender and then chopped, add the Juice of five oranges and ten cupfuls of sugar. Cook until like Jam. This makes an excellent relish for meat. Cranberry pie needs no recommendation for It Is universally liked. Make with strips of pastry forming a lattice work over the pie. Instead of a solid crust. CONDENSATIONS soup and is considered a great treat by them, but It comes as a surprise to large numbers of people In cities and In the country that so many dainty dishes may be produced from buttermilk. We read of the sour-mllcure for purifying the alimentary canal, this led to the study of buttermilk, which was for a long time not at all appreciated. Buttermilk cheese is now a favorite dish In many of our college towns, where a cafeteria Is profitable. This cheese is richer and finer grained than ordinary cottage cheese and once eaten Is never thereafter refused. Buttermilk Cheese. This Is the method used In Wisconsin experiment station for making the cheese: Heat the buttermilk slowly to 130 or 140 degrees F., stirring all the time. This may be done In a double boiler. After heating, the curd settles to the bottom of the boiler and most of the whey may be poured off. The remainder of the whey Is removed by draining through a cheesecloth, doubled In several ' layers. Season with salt and pepper or with salt and caraway seed. When mixed with a little softened butter, about a fourth In weight, and spread on sandwiches, it is called sandwich cheese. Buttermilk Cream. This Is very similar to the cheese, but Is treated to a lower temperature in heating. A hundred degrees F. Is the required temperature, stirring constantly until the curd separates. Drain through a cheese cloth until the curd Is like thick cream; season and serve as sandwich filling or as a dressing, witti vinegar for salads, used In the place of the German cream dressing. Pineapple Lacto Beat the yolks and whites of two eggs separately, add two or three cupfuls of sugar, mixed with two quarts of sour skim milk and 114 cupfuls of pineapple. When partly frozen add the Juice of two lemons. In place of the pineapple a half cupful of cherry Juice may be used, or the Juice of five oranges, or a cupful of strawberry Juice, or a half a cupful of raspberry Juice, thus making any fruit lacto. k ; PORT ALL ASTIR British and French Uniforms Sighted Austrian Prisoners Toil In Acres of Freight Pasture Becomes Great Quay An Odd Lit- -' tie Town. By NIKOLAI KOSLOV. (Correspondent of the Chicago News ) Moscow, Russia. Up on the coast of the Arctic ocean, In a latitude north of Nome, I have Just seen the arrival of a section of the Belgian army. This time last year the world was ringing with that gigantic hoax about a Russian army going to Belgium Who would have dreamed that by October, 1915, an army of dapper little ITamands and Bruxellois, convoyed by British torpedo-boa- t destroyers, would sail around the top of the world and town the White sea to Russia .and that Archangel would be Invaded by Belgian gunners and armored automobile crews, roaring the "Brabanconne and frescoing Russian transport trains with Rabelaisian sketches of victorious encounters with the Teuton? 1 found French soldiers and Belgian airmen and British bluejackets up there, too.1 And some hundreds of Austrian prisoners doing odd jobs In the docks. 8cores of American Autos. It Is quite a Journey to Archangel. In America a train would have got one there between breakfast and supper. However, this is Russia. It takes two days and two nights. Among other traffic we passed on the sidings was a long stalled train of scores of American automobiles, doing the last lap of their Journey from the docks of Vladivostok. The freight-ca- r load of sold.ers at the tall of It said they had been five weeks on their way. At Vologda 1 transshipped to the narrow gauge single-tracline running 400 versts (267 miles) due' north through the bleak subarctic tundra. It was a train with no springs, an incessant and abominable rattling and an eerie trick of buckjumptng whenever the brakes were applied. No Hurry About Double Tracking.4 They are supposed to be double tracking their little line, which the Germans Installed, Osnabruck rails and all, in 1876 double tracking and standard gauging It It is the sole CAKES FOR TEA. highway to the sole open Russian port, the only channel tor the admission of It one has on hand small cakes or munitions, apart from Vladivostok, cookies that will keep tor some time, thousands of miles east All the forthey are much more sat- eign residents In Russia say that it isfactory for an emer- should have been double tracked and gency than cake which broad gauged a year ago, at least will grow stale, and is Even now, however, whoever Is reharder to make as welL sponsible for It seems to be playing Lemon Delights. Take with It M1 wonder," a Frenchman remarked a cupful of sugar, a half of a cupful butter, cupful and a half of flour, PLEADS FOR INDIAN FRIENDS a teaspoonful of baking powder, three eggs, a cupful of water, the Juice and rind o a lemon. Heat the yolLs and add to the sugar and butter, then a pinch of salt Is added, the lemon rind, water, and Juice. Stir In the flour sifted with the baking powder and fold In the whites of the eggs beaten stiff. Bake In gem pans and ice with lemon frosting, decorating each cake with a pinch of preserved lemon peel. Hermits. Take two cupfuls of brown sugar, a cupful of butter, and when well creamed add one egg, well beaten, a halt cupful of milk and a teaspoonful of soda, dissolved In IL add flour to roll, with a half teaspoon-fu- l each of cinnamon and nutmeg, a half cupful of chopped almonds and a cupful of raisins. Roll, cut In oblongs, and bake. Sponge Dominoes. Bake an ordinary sponge cake In a shallow tin. Cut in small oblongs and cover with When cold drop chocolate Icing. drops of icing to represent dominoes. Whef plain cake has become a trifle stale, put It In thin slices and put jam, Jelly or marmalade between the layers, then cut in fancy shapes and cover with bulled frosting. Date Filling for Cake. Chop two cupfuls of dates, add two tablespoon-fuf of lemon Juice, cupful of powdered sugar and a half cupful of whlppod cream. Mix all together and spread as a filling on any kind of layer cake. k one-hal- Australia maintains a training school for boys who desire to become farmers but lack the means to and Is expert Me., fearfully Harbor, Bar, wonderfully protected. In SpanlBh pay for proper Instruction. Not since 1864, with one exception, war times Its residents protested against the danger and the humorous has California produced so much gold war department sent them four anti- ns In 1914, when the output was worth cannon, relics $20,6b3,496. quated muzzle-loadinof the Civil war. The summer folk took the cannon to their Microphone Wonderful Machine. By means of the microphone, the hearts with all sincerity, however, and posted them at excellent points very faintest sounds, such as the fall of vantage, where they may still be of a feather or a very delicate piece of tissue paper, may be distinctly beard seen and smiled at much-relieve- RUSSIAS Mary Roberts Rinehart, the only woman correspondent who got to the actual fighting front In Europe and whose writings on the war are tilling many pages of the magazines, was in Washington a few days ago In the Interests of her friends and tribal brothers, the Blackfeet Indians. Mrs. Rinehart who lives In Pittsburgh, visited Glacier National park last summer srter her return from Europe and was adoptld Into the Black tout tribe, whose reservation is adjacent to the park. In Washington Mrs. Rinehart visited both the president and Secretary Lane and through the latter was promised tbat extra rations would be issued to die Blackfeet to the comliig winter. thfl W ft for bank r Cent-1.4 Wa but w Governor William Spry action in the Hlllstrom case mliSl in the arrest at Ogden of G mSi W Peter Ryan. Utah Celery day was the San Diego exposition observed.! 6, when specimens of UtahDecW ,0i were distributed to large crowd, iting the Utah building. H. F. Gerry, convicted a charge of Opening and pubtoJS a letter addressed to James Riie Salt Lake, has been sentenced b serve ninety days in the city jail The sugarbeet growers of wuum have finally decided to support Z Correspondent Describes Sur prising War Scene on the ' Contrary to pH rules and advice DELICIOUS BUTTERMILK. of our forefathers white woolen blankets, sweaters and Our Welsh friends have made a hot wool underwear will not dish which might tie called buttermilk up la ?1 fevler Utah-Idah- o Red Cross A young boy and girl are here seen being ministered to by nurses in France after being wounded by German shells. Such scenes are before they can get out of the zone of Are. frequent, for many refugees are hit to me on the train, "if they will have done this vitally necessary work by this time next year? A few gangs of track laborers were going through the motions listlessly. Nor did the numerous gangs of convicts seem to be losing any sleep over their construction efforts. For four and twenty hours we Jolted up the narrow groove, cleared through primeval forest and swamp. Already there was Ice In the peaty streams meandering across our path and a powdering of snow on the murmuring cedars. Then we emerged into a district of stubble field and meadows. And suddenly Into the thick of a great entrepot of freight Pasture Becomes Great Quay, This was Bakareetsa, the main White sea railroad depot from which Russias stores are coming. Along the Dvina bank, a strip of deserted cow pasture a few months ago, now Is a great quay. Ten or twelve steamers were alongside unloading. Tens of thousands of tons of coal towered In hills and massive ridges. Rows on leanto barracks rows of housed the laborers. A score of sidings and acres of mud were stacked with packing cases and sacks and bales. Freighters with the colored painting of the bursting bomb betokened shells and dynamite within regiments of freighters with everything aboard from aeroplanes to xylonite; rows of freight cars piled with great crates consigned from Cleveland, In Ohio, to Tiflls, In Asia Minor, vta the environs of Spitsbergen and the watery wilderness of the Arctic ocean. A few, miles farther on the train stopped, still In a desolate region of muddy fields, for the Archangel ter minus Is not Archangel We all crowded on to a steamer and navigated two miles downstream to the town, which lies on the other side of the Dvina estuary, here a couple of miles across. An odd little town is Archangel with a pervasive atmosphere of remoteness and aloofness from the world. In summer thdre Is no night, and the thawed swamps cut off all overland Journeyings but those of mosquitoes and birds. In winter there is next to no day and the quarter mile of Troltskaja street lined with shops Is all with the bells of reindeer. Sinuous dog-slecaravans, laden with polar bear and wolf pelts, snake their way into the thronged bazaar, to barter for the summers bread. Busy Times In Archangel. Archangel Is busy now. Archangel has never known such goings on. Soldiers and sailors and millions of tons of freight havu come from the ends of the earth. It Is a town transformed Into a freight yard freight piled mountain high on the quays, waves of freight passing inland up the slope behind the custom bouse. All over the square there an I overflowing Into the main street Itself lie acres and acres of bales and rails and crates and tubs and boxes, and tens of thousands of a mysterious Dreed of reddish sack. Archangel has original Ideas about sidewalks that would not commend themselves to American motorists. Streets have these raised wooden sidewalks running up the center. Every now and then along these sidewalks passsd British naval officers and seamen, Intermingling with transplanted men of the Russian Baltic squadron. Past the shabby town duma, one enters what has hitherto been known as the .German quarter, a long avenue of the best houses in town, running due north toward the suburb of Solombola. Motor Jitney boats, ferries, dinghies, tugs, liners, sailing skiffs, barges, ocean tramps and long log rafts from the forest of Vlatka busy themselves out In the Dvina, well displayed against the low bank and flat horizon leagues to the westward, where dainty distant silhouettes of monasteries and churches fleck the rim of the earth. I passed a great red brick brewery on the Dvina bank, converted Into a Red Cross hospital Convalescent were standing In the ward windows, casing glumly upon about Ova acres ot boxes of empties piled as high as a bouse. Not so bad for a lit tie .own of tu.ooo. At a marine departmental office on the Troltskaja was a fine automobile. The chauffeur was a Russian navel man, aud Its door was opened by a turf-roofe- d d sol-die- British bluejacket orderly as the two admirals, Russian and British, came Sugar company, to erect a new factory on f Bear flVer dUrlng which k the th9 1916 V. Q. Austin, president of the Am. tin Organ company, is in Salt Lake arranging for the reconstruction and enlargement of the famous tabernacle organ, which will be started within few days. Some of the Eureka Prisoners Look Comfortable. sportsmei have organized what will be knows a Ahead, down the bank, appeared as a Coyote club. great cluster of masts. That was the away for a bunch ofThey have lent speedy dogs, of Solombola suburb, the lower docks which will be used In hunting coy. Archangel. I reached It by a wooden otes, mountain lions, etc. causeway bridging a broad creek, the Forty boys of the manual training banks of which are occupied by timof the Grantsville High department were ber yards. Women loading log school under the direction ot the barges. On the opposite bank, halt in manual training, are a mile away, I saw gray figures movthe roof of the nerw $18,000 Se ing. Austrian prisoners or German? ond ward meeting house. 1 came closer. Oh, Austrians. AusEastern Utah Is a natural cattle trians clean and very well clad In their warm, scarcely soiled uniforms country. The range Is practically uand greatcoats. They were on gen- nlimited, both for winter and Bummer eral dock laboring Jobs, mostly in a purposes. Scarcely any feeding !i great field of bales of American cotton, done In this section except where the surrounded on all sides, except the cattle are being prepared for market timber palisade, river, by an eight-foo- t There Is a total of state funds on with sharpened tops. They looked deposit as of November 30. the end well fed and cheerful I might add of the fiscal year, of $377,925.69, di here that whatever adverse criticisms tributed bank: twenty-thre- e In may Justly be made of the Russians, throughout the state, according to the they treat their prisoners as gentle- annual report of he state treasurer. men. The Russian Is a pretty good Although compulsory military drill fellow, from the human point of view In the Ogden high school, in accord a natural born democrat and a ance with the recent action of the sportsman. board of education, does not take el There were a lot of guards about In feet until after the holidays, about Solombola, civilian armed, civilian un- 100 boys have volutarily taken u; armed and Russian soldiers. Unfamiltraining. iar passers-bare eyed suspiciously George C. McLaughlin was shot lx At the dockyard entrance boles In the back when he was killed near Ma the palisade stood civilian guards with land. Idaho, by Ray M. Thompson, belt loaded rifles slung across their to evidence brought tc according backs. Above the gates were holy in the performance of an as ikons, gilded pictures of saints, with light of McLaughlls two peculiar tippets of fur hanging topsy upon the body In Salt Lake City. from them. The construction of another link U There was an intensely Interesting double track of the Salt Lake ft the flow of traffic along this road to the for Iasi Solombola docks, a medley of races, Ogden railroad was provided ot the comofficials week when the a lltjj-arof odd human documents. authorized the building ot I Through the deep black mud passed pany second main track between Center Samoy-eds- , wagons driven by slant-eyeot three an Eskimolike tribe of the Rus- ville and Wilcox, a distance miles. sian arctic littoral, and The Salt Lake Associated Cam) Mohammedan Tartars from the nine parched deserts of Turkestan. And companies have closed five of the there were carts driven by hairy Rus- tig gates In the Jordan river at lti sian moujlks of the north, with huge cutlet from Utah lake, and will use reddish beards; and carts driven by the lake as a reservoir until its level two clean-shavedapper little Austrian reaches compromise point about feet higher than its pres prisoners, each with a civilian guard and one-bal- f In tow. CosBack soldiers were on ent level. The Layton Sugar company hai scampering ponies and soldiers plodded afoot British jack completed its run for the year and tars navigated the sidewalk with a reports having used 23.000 tons of fine, free roll and men of the Imperial beets. The average yield per aert Russian navy walked In quick, short was unusually low this year, being Thl steps. only about ten tons per acre. Bees Two French Soldiers. was due to the excessive and very on Just as I was passing the clanging usual drought. A total of $201,648.81 was collected foundry two French soldiers appeared tb among the passers-by- , real French in fees by state officers during Fro 30. November in fiscal their long blue greatcoats poilus year ending and baggy red breeches. What they the secretary of state there came $2 were doing and whether or not they 938 la fees, $70,998.73 In corporate were forerunners of a big landing Ilka taxes and $214.77 from the sale ol froa that of the Belgians 1 do not know. compiled laws, making the total In the main street of Archangel one this office $97,131.52. afternoon I saw what I thought was a Twelve thousand dollars In boun group of British army officers. 1 found ties on predatory animals killed with they were Belgians In the new smart In the state since July 10 were a? khaki uniform, closely copied from proved by the state auditor last week the British. A few Belgian soldiers and the money will now Be paid M appeared on the streets the following the claimants. This amount repre day, to the intense Interest of the natents between 700 and SOI) tives, many of whom took them for a oyotes, mountain lions and slmua new brand of Austrian. :re.4ures. Next morning Archangel was snowed baby girl Virginia, the under with Belgian soldiers, mainly Lawrence and Marie Muslg Barton gunners and flying men and men well Mt. Tleasant. toddled across the street w versed In running armored automo- from her parents home and 1 biles and perambulating forts. Little Taa creek. In drowned Ileaeant men, hardly bigger than Japanese, en- tie of out girl had not been mlnut veloped In blue greatest; the gunsight but a few ners with crossed cannon In red braid found lying In the enat was when she on their arms. Polite little men. too. low creek. . n Meeting on the step, they hold a shop P. J. Sanders, who has been door open for a woman to enter flrsL club wc with a bow, and a Sll vous plalL charge of boys and girls I In Davis county,, discloses the madame" tna age school It was difficult to get a shave In that the children of direction dur have been under hla j Archangol that day, though there are in produced have summer the past plenty of barber shops for the use ot he ha been sailors. Rows of Belgian soldiers oc- various activities that of $10,222.05 wort cupied the chalis and benches In the rectlng a total hogs. P0'1"7 flowers, hinterland. It was next to Impossible vegetables, and sewing. to get stamps at the post office be- bread, canned products With a view to Investigating cause of the Belgians there. of sw (a a group of Belgian officers In the dltlons of the poultry Industry I Lake county more than forty Offitzerov restaurant waa a prlesL of inspec also .In militant khaki. He was poultrymen made a trip last wac dressed tike an officer, except for his over the county one day fasten behind clerical collar and a red. system will be worked out whe i black and gold croxs pinned to his any poultry product can he tracod breasL The gold tassel dangling from the person who originally sold IL the front of the Belgian officers Utahs awards at the two Callfornl' cap. to t by the way, is a cause of much gig expositions were brought rec p gllng to tho Russian maidens. . seven In number with the For three days the Belgians re word that the San Francisco lg malned . Then, as mysteriously as tlon had given the Mate they bad appeared, they fsdud awav medals for eighteen entries or m 8 toward tbs south. cultural and horticultural product. ouL shla-glin- y d skull-cappe- d n Malo-Russla- n s'ar . |