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Show S sums to THE KITCHEN Rotator SAVORY tied along, Prussian Guard Maintains Its Reputation for boiled, their Jackets car nmy be fried In butter to 0VILLE51S A HEAP RUBBISH sA 1st Residence. (VTTV South and 1st WeJ Hours, 10 to 12 p.m. Suadt, b, Phone 53 ! a. m. Spanish FoA J. W. Hagan, M.D Offiice at Creer Building s. 8ALAD. A inlad la suitable to serve at any meal, upon any occasion to any people, but not every salad. "Sulnds refresh without exciting and make younger." people There are several points Important to be observed in the making of salWhen vegeads. tables are used they should be fresh and crisp and usuully the aulad is better if mixed Just before serving, not to destroy the crispness as that Is the chief charm of a salad. Th kind of sulad dressing to use depends upon the combination and upon the tuxte of the persons to be served. The simple French dressing Is one that Is most commonly liked and one which Is so easily prepured that It appeuls to the busy housewife. One purt of Strong vinegar to three parts oil Is usually sufficiently acid, then with the addition of salt and red pepper to tnste, when well beaten and allowed to chill it Is ready to serve. A touch of garlic or onion Is liked for flavor In many vegetable salads. This may be obtained by rubbing a cut clove of gnrllc over the Inside of the salad bowl or rubbing u piece of bread which Is placed in the bottom of the bowl to season the whole dish. This Is called a clmpon. This bread may be In one piece or In stuull cubes and served with the salad If liked. When parsley Is to be used gather a well washed bunch In the hand and with a sharp knife shred It very fine; gather the leaves closely with the fingers, then chop the parsley with the knife until very One. I'ut the finely chopped herb in a cloth and hold under a stream of water, wring dry and use this green powder to dust over ...wftithe salad. Radishes may be cut to look like tulips. With a sharp knife score the red skin at the root end into five or plx sections extending up he radish nearly to the stem, then loosen the skin and place In cold water when taejr will become crisp and the points ni aland ou like the petals of a British Capture of Town Result of Bitterest Fight In Battle of Somme Dogged and Desperate Defense. f will xtrlv to ralxa my ewn body and soul dally Into higher powers of duty and happiness; not In rlvalihlp nr contention with sthera, but for tha help, dellsht, honor of other, and for the jov and peaca af my own Ilf. John Ruskln. By appetizing; leftovers. With a little attention to detail one may make very dainty and elegant dishes from hits of leftover food. A tahleNHon-fu- l of ham for example may be finely chopped and added to a thick white sauce and used to cover cold broiled lamb chop. Then when firm and cold they may be egged and breaded and All fried In deep fat. these materials may he left over, yet this Is a famous dish In a very select club In London. Mutton Creols Style. Melt three tnhlespoonfuls of butter In a saucepan and saute In this a tablespoonful each of green pepper and onion chopped fine j add three tnhlespoonfuls of flour and half a teaspoonful of salt; cook until foamy, then add a cupful of brown stock and half a cupful of strained tomnto. Cook three minutes, then set over hot water and udd a cupful of sliced cold roast mutton, cut In strips, and a half cupful of cold cooked macaroni. Fillets of Chicken. This is a dainty dish for an Invalid or Is plenty In amount for a small family. Remove the fillets from a plump and tender chicken and separate from the bone and skin. Detach the small fillets and cut the larger ones Into two lengthwise strips the size of the smaller fillets. lleat a frying pan very hot, butter slightly and lay in the fillets, sprinkle with the Juice of a lemon, salt and pepper; add a third of a cupful of chicken stock and a tahlespoonful of orange Juice; cover and cook ten minutes. Prepare a sauce, using butter andtflour, two tablespoonfuls of each and a cupful of chicken stock In which a bit ham has tylded flavor; add a tablespoonful it mugjirooift Catsup and a tablespoonful of orange Juice. This dish might not be called a leftover, strictly speaking, yet the fillets could be saved from some other chicken dlah without pay loss. Left-ove- r SmnlJ pickles or gherkins may be Ice cream may be recut Ini very thin slices lengthwise with-pu- t frozen and served with a different detaching at one end, then spread sauce or add crushed fruit, or fruit ut the slices as a fan Is spread. Use Juice to the cream or a chocolate as a garnish. sauce, making any number of ways of are delicious served varying the frozen dish. Cucumbers sliced with a sour cream dressing. us drllght In slmpls things. This Is especially well liked by the Tsaeh And mirth that has no blttsr springs; Germnns. Forgiveness fre of svll dons. Endive served In a bowl, rubbed And lov to all men 'nsatb th tun! with garlic, sprinkle with chopped Kipling. chives and serve with string beans, FISH SALADS. . with French dressing. -As there Is a large variety to choose The countless gold of a merry heart. The rubles and pearls of a loving llfe.e from among so many fish, one Is sure to find many deliThe Idle man never can bring to the mart. cacies of flavor Nor the cunning hoard up In bis and not necessartreasury. -- William Blake. ily at all expensive salads. DINNER IN THE WOODS. Halibut Salad. a Steam thick When the family loses Its appetite, slice of halibut untake n til the flesh sepabasket, and after a rates easily from good tramp In the woods anything will taste good. the bones. Remove the skin and the A few good things for bones without breaking the fish. the basket are given Marinate while It Is still hot with herewith : three tahlespoonfuls of oil, one Veal Loaf. of vinegar and salt and pepTake three and u half pounds per. When cold put the fish on the of veal, serving dish on a bed of lettuce, garmix with three nish the top with spoonfuls of mnyon-nnls- e eggs, a grated nutand funs cut from sinull pickles meg, a tahlespoonful of with slices of stuffed olives. Any fish salt and a teaspoonful of of good flavor may be treated In this black pepper, n tahlespoonful of thyme manner. and onion Juice and u dash of cayenne. Salad of Salt Mackerel. Freshen Add three tnhlespoonfuls of creura the fish before rooking; then use equal and three water crackers, rolled fine. purts of the flaked fish with rooked Mix In n long loaf, cover with thin potatoes. If the potatoes are prepared Mires of salt Hrk and bake an hour, expressly for this purpose, cut them This may be sliced In cube and cook In well seasoned basting often. thin and wrapped In pars fine paper, or beef stock; drain and add when cold may be used in slices as sandwich to the fish. Season with French dressfilling. ing. Arrange on a bed of lettuce and Deviled Eggs. Cut sift egg yolk over the whole. shelled eggs lengthwise, put the yolk Clowslip and Cream Cheese Salad. through sieve, add mustard, cayenne, Cook cowslip greens until tender, butter and salt to taste und fill the hoi-lo- mold In a mound, and garnish with a In the white even full, then the tuft of the fresh cowslips with blostwo halves may be wrapped together soms ; around the mound arrange seaIn paraffin paper, as they carry bet- soned cream cheese, or cottage cheese ter, or they may be packed In a shal- may he served In place of the crenin low box with paper between the lay- cheese. Iass a howl of rich yellow ers. dressing either boiled or nm.vonnolse. If one has provided the equipment Shad Roe and Cucumber Salad. there Is nothing more appetizing than Cook two shud roes with an onion sliced steak at a picnic. Well seusotied with und a buy leaf, In suited acidulated butter It Is tit for a king. water, 20 minutes; drain nnd marinate Fresh scrambled eggs Is another with about two tahlespoonful of oil, good dish; the materials and frying one tuhlespoonful of lemon Julee and n dash of pepper nud salt. When cold jnn to cook them In being carried. For a hot sandwich slice good cheese cut In cubes. Rub the salmi howl thin, place on buttered bread and with n cut chive of add a well make Into M.ndwleh form, then saute chilled cucumber cutgarlic; In dice, after linIn a little hot butter, toasting on both ing the howl with lettuce, add the roe, sides. Serve piping hot. Grated cover with mayonnaise and place a cheese on one slice and chut- elrcle of overlapping slices of cucumney on the other, put together nud ber around the center of the mound. fried Is another good hot one. A little flaked fish added to a potato Ilrown bread spread with butter salad improves It. and chopped green pepper, to which a llttlo minced parsley und red pepper la added makes a nice sandwich. i d table-spoonf- finely-choppe- Office Offlc serve with the beefsteak, and little green onions will not offend anyone If eaten In the great ' well-tille- HOT FOE HUNGER; yCABlNET Some hav much and aoma have mora. Home ara rich and aoma ara poor. Borne hava little, aoma hava lane, Borne hava not a cent to bleaa Their empty pocket, yet poaaeaa True rlrhea In true happtnaea. John Oxenham. Dr. Joseph HugU d well-beate- n hard-cooke- w par-mesa- n ul PHILIP GIBBS. Phone 32 Offiice Hours 2 to 4 p. m, Dr. C D. Livingston DENTIST With the British Army in the Field. In all the recent fighting the struggle for Ovlllcrs stands out sep Geer Binlding-Spani- sh Fork, Utah. atarutely as a siege In which both PHONE NO. II tack and defense were of the most kind. and desperate dogged The surrender of the remnants of Its gurrison ends an episode which will Them not he forgotten In history. FLORIST men were of the Third Prussian Guards, and the tribute puld to their Fmh Flowers tupplied for IlacciloM, Fnen) bravery by our commander in chief Is dign kept on head tod filled ta di. All kind ol Furaitui Rapeiitd. by the officers and men who Is a tribute It them. fought ugulnst Reiideac Two Block Noah f Fauidiy to our own troops also, who, by no Utah less courage, broke down the stubborn Spanish Fork resistance and captured the garrison. Town Now Rubbish Heap. hnd a Muny different battalions share in the fighting. All lmd suffered nnd then gave way to new men Feed who knew not the nature of this business, hut set grimly to work to curry on the slow process of digging out the enemy from his last strongholds. It was almost literally the work of dig- HACK MEETS ALL TRAINS ging out. The town of Ovlllers does not exist. It was annihilated by bom12 bardments und made a rubbish heap of bricks and dust. SPANISH FORK UTAH But after that, when our men were separated from the enemy by only a yard or two or by only a barrlcude or two, the artillery on both sides ceased the fire upon Ovillers, lest the FASHONABLE gunners should kill their own men. round Intensely They barroged about Our shells fell Incessantly On Block North of th Bank to the north and east so that the benot should Utah get supleaguered garrison Spanish Fork we made a plies or wall of death about them. But though now no shells burst over the ground where many dead lay strewn, there was artillery of a lighter kind, not less deadly. It was the artillery of machine guns nnd bombs. The Prussian- guards made full use of the valued cellars and ruined houses. They We to made a series of small keeps, which with were defended almost entirely by maserve you chine gun fire. See Us in the Between the attacks of our bombBefore line printed ing parties they went below ground Going Into dark vaults, where It was safe Else for enough from trench mortar and hnnd where business grenades, leaving a sentry or two on the lookout for any Infantry assault As soon as we advanced the machine use . guns set to work and played their hose of bullets across the ground Bill Heads which our men had to cover. Letter Beads Guard Finally Glvea Up. Cards Envelopes One by one, by getig around about Invitations Wedding them, by working zigzag ways through Posters or Announcements cellars and ruins, by sudden rushes o bombing parties led by young officer Of All Klada of daring spirit, we knocked out these machine gun emplacements nnd the The best quality of work gunners who served them, until yesterday there was only a last remnant prices that are RIGHT of the garrison left In Ovillers. These men of the Third Prussian Guard long hnd been In a hopeless position. They were starving because all supplies were cut off by our never-endinbarrage; they had no water supply, so suffered ull the tortures of great thirst. They were living In a ehnrnul house strewn with the dead bodies of their comrades nnd with wounded men delirious from luck of of being a subscriber to this drink. paper is that ycu and your Human nature could make no long-e- r family become attached to resistance, and at last the officers The paper becomes a raised the signal of surrender und member of the family and came over with nearly 140 men, who its coming each week will held their hands np. be as welcome as the arThe fighting hnd been savage. At rival of anyone thats dear. close grips, In broken earthworks nnd It will keep you informed on deep cellars, there lmd been no sentithe doing of the community end ment and British soldiers nnd Gerthe bargain of th merchant mans had flung themselves upon each regularly advertlaed will enable other with bombs and uny kind of you to save many time th cost of the subscription, weapons, but now. when ull was ended, the last of the German garrison was received with the honors of wur nnd none of our soldiers deny the the respect due to great courage. u scene on the United States side of the International bridge at LI I'aso showing United Rtates soldiers searching Mexican refugees who tied Mexico for protection under the Stars and Stripes. One of the soldiers Is seen with a revolver he bus taken from one of the refugees. A undertaken from the beginning. The men had to lie lodged, clothed, armed and equipped fur from their own BELGIUM NOW HAS SPLENDID ARMY Remarkable Piece of Work in Reorganization Accomplished Since October, 1914. TRIBUTE TO R. M. JEX ZEAL OF KING Belgian Army More Numerous and Better Equipped Than It Was at Outbreak of the War Difficulties Surmounted. Pari. It Is hard Indeed to recognize In the and trained Relglan army of today the disheveled, troops who, at the end of a painful retreat and lacking almost every military necessity hut courage, turned desperately to buy and helped to make history at the battle of the war-wear- y The reorganization accomplished since October, 1914, is a remarkable testimony to the energy Inspired by the . exupiple of King Albert and the seal with which, often In very difficult circumstances, his officers have fulfilled their task! The result of their efforts Is that M. de Rroquevllle was able to declore recently that the Belgian army Is more numerous and better equipped today than it was at the outbreak of war. country. The French government rose to the An extensive camp nnd a oceaslon. number of large buildings In various purts of Normandy barracks, convents nnd unemployed factories were put at the disposal of the Belgians. Clothing wus hard to find, and here again, for part of It, recourse was had to the French, although they themselves had barely enough for their own need. A clothing depot was formed at llouen, which obtained cloth from Elheiif. Factories which had been closed for want of labor were reopened for the manufacture of equipment. Hospital Centers Created. Similarly at Rouen, and this time with the assistance of the British Red Cross, a hospital center wus created, Including a large portuhle hospital, situated above the town in a particularly hpulthy position, a section for mechanical treatment and a section for the manufacture of artificial limbs. Another hospital center, equally well equipped, was founded In the district of Rennes. Attached to these are convalescent homes. From the purely military point of view, the arrangements made by the general Inspection of the Belgian army are wonderfully complete. There are centers for Infantry training, an artillery school and depot, a machine-gu- n school, a bombing school and a school at which men coming from the convalescent homes are taught by "old soldiers" the latest tricks of the trade before returning to the trenches. Recruiting offices have been started In all French towns where assemblages of Belgian refugees are to be found, as also military establishments at e41 places through which the troops pass. Most Important of all, a school, known as the "Centre d Instruction des auxllialres Instruc-teurs,- " has been opened, at which a great number of picked noncommissioned officers and soldiers are taught the command of platoons, thus Insuring a steady supply of Livery and Stable Phone No. Lorenzo Thomas TAILOR hospital-organizatio- Job IPrinting are htrt anything of stationery your Start at the Beginning. When, In October, 1914, Antwerp was evacuated, the Belgian recruits who had Joined and, being still without arms or equipment, had been employed In digging trenches round the city, were sent back to the neighborhood of Furnes. Driven thence by the approach of the Germans, they retired, under the command of Lieutenant General de Sellters de Moranvllle, to Dunkirk. Hence, In the face of Innumerable dif- WILLS HIS ESTATE TO CITY ficulties, of which not the least was the lack of shipping, they were conveyed to Normandy where the whole work 4 Pioneer Resident Leaves $12,000 to Sacramento to Reduce the preparing them for the front had to be Tax Rate. and personal well-trulue- d CHINESE HELLO GIRL Sacramento, terms of the Cal. According will of the lute H. BROWN B. at to the Philip Miller, who died recently, the city of Sacramento will secure more than $12,000 to decrease the tuxes. The estate Is valued at $22,000. The will says : "The residue of the estate shnll be paid Into the general fund of the city of Sacramento, and shall not he made use of for any specific purpose, but shall be simply so used that It will to some extent decrease the taxes which the people would otherwise he compelled to pay." There are several other beneficiaries under the will. Miller, who was un married, was a pioneer resident of the city. g The Sum and Substance it Man Posed as a Woman. Wheeling, W. Va. When "Sarah" Hamilton, eight-siyears old. colored died In the Ohio county home recent ly It was found that she" was a nmn. "She had been In the home several Hen Hatches Woodpecker years nnd no suspicion was ever en Federnishurg, Ind.- -It Is unusual for tertatned as to her sex. Before enter a hen to hatch out n woodpecker, hut Ing the county home the pseudo worn an Instance Is by lru (ordrev un hnd worked as a domestic for t a fanner livingreported near here. The hJn CO for lmd been prominent family years. missing for some time. When found she was mothering eleven Iml.y His Sleep Was Fatal. chicks nnd one tiny woodpecker which N. Camden. J. Harry Walls, thirty appeared perfectly happy to let the live, n farmer nf Beverly, was kill.-,- , hen scratch worms for It, and the hen by a fall from Ids truck while driving ? J,,st much attention to produce to the Philadelphia murk he little woodpecker ns It U to .r It Is supposed he fell asleep and vv brood of chicks. Jolted off. The horses, having made Is explained supi the trip many times, came without I "';n.nce a woodpecker laid the eg- - In driver through this city and stopp, urn's nest w Idle the hen was off In line at the ferry to Philadelphia. looking for fowl. x What You Want How You Want It When You Want It anything in the line of V. printing come -- U to ui and well guarantee you satisfactory work at price that are right T For J,. Will Open Coffin Dally. I,os Angeles. Every day two months the caretaker of Fofest I.awn cemetery will open the coffin containing the body of William C. Kipp, I.os Angeles capitalist. This Mrs. Nlng Fnok, sweet-voiceChi- ceremony will tuke place In accordnese "Hello Girl" who attend the ance with the will of Mr. Kipp, who switchlumrd In the office of a steam- wa haunted by the feur of premature burial. ship company In San Francisco. fr d Compromise ISS Ends "ring a period of 20 lug court years and Involy. n dings ate. Un., Gilbert Hopkins (.vcrul determine title to timber lands in vlue, i.a Jl.oUl.onn, has Just I pro Settled hv f, " ,,,,l'r,"lse decree end court at Asheville,entered N, (- 71 Remember Thai every added subscriber help to make this paper better fer everybody |