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Show CDAWTQT? FORK. UTAH THE SPANISH FORK PRESS. SPANISH FORK. UTAH log nothing but suffer. So 1 strolled thing better to look forward to and along, sticking tny head Into barracks acme relief from the awful misery, doors, sometimes trying to hava a talk Mr. Gerard was other times trying to pick a fight. li French burracke passing through the and a man I knew was all on to ms: I Just wanted somethere told him there was so American to I do. found what I wanted, there. The Germans did not thing want him all right. to see me, hut he put up ao srgumeut I hud quit a talk with a sentry In with the commanding officer and they front of 'barracks. It must have finally sold he could Interview me, 1 lasted three-qunrtof an hour. U never was so glad to see anyone as did not know what I was culling him, I whs to se him. Tbs picture Is still and ! did not know w ha ( he was fall-In- g with ins of him coming In ths door. me. I rould have handled him at We talked for shout an hour and n right, but another sentry rums up on half, 1 guess, and then he got up to For the year of peers end The oral of household polity era niy blind side and grubbed me and the go nnd be sal-- I would hear from him And for liltHiilt'K without end, the ecelne of love, end ehe who baltalk was over. In about three weeks. Just think what VH tha vole? of Out people ance tliain evenly la tmloeil wise. They drugged ms to the command-- . In Thankittlvin pruieee blend news thnt was to met of the cump and he Instructed them to good let nut WAVS CHESTNUTS. tho of lue WITH They guardhouse give me n bath. Bo they took me to and I THANKSGIVING DISHES. celebrated by doing all the damthe Imthhouse, where I was stripped to Genflnn sentries I age that could This Is highdefinitely flavored nut and All the time they were AND CHIEF FETTVtOFFl Bomelhlng new or untried la always do. The men in the ramps went wild ly valued, and where, it Is found In whipping me I was thinking what a when MEMBER OF THE FOREIGN LEGION welcome for the great national Thankslearned that Ambassador they abundance adds many Joke It was on me, bernUM 1 had been CAPTAIN GUN TURRERENCH BATTLESHIP giving day. Gerard was there, for they sold he was tasty dishes to the menu. CASSAPJ) looking fbr excitement and Imd got Baked huhbnrd , In man the could WINNER OF THE CROIX DE GUERRE only Germany they Mashed Chestnuts more than I wanted, so I laughed and served aa squash tell to. troubles their reason The was This dish, If served for a Cmf Mlllr Kar mW hate C. Thci Veal Amnemri W fa Carp Mfaew Adtm fafa the Huns thought I was crazy sure. dish an cscnlloped luncheon or auptier dish I ws dumped Into a vat of hot water that he was strong for the men, no la not a common CHAPTER XXI. an Englishman stepped out of the door nnd at the matter wtmt nationality, and put his with sliced cold meat same time my clothes were heart Into the work. I am on 18 way of treating the for some reason or other, sod though given a of takes the place of potawhich was M, I boiling, dish. ) M for A Visit From Mr. Gerard. good he did not any a word to Fritz, In two those who ennnot say enough good toes and gives us new them, Is Late Unit sight we arrived at It good very about him. Like yet minuter he was dead, In cold blood. many others. dish. Shell and blunrh Then I was forced Into my wet things a for change. We were rousted We never knew why not hnd If been It 1 Westphalia. for Mr. Gerard clothes and marched hack to the barthey killed him. the nuts, then cook them out of the carriages, mustered on the Dulnty little pumpkin plea linked In would he kaput by now. At Swlnemunde and Neustrelltz, I racks. In milk until tender. This bath and the stroll platform, counted, then drilled through must admit that the Germans hnd us patty tins are great fuvorltcs with A few day after this 1 waa slow Mush and season with suit, butter and the small the afreet. In spit of the luteueKS, pretty badly buffuloed, but at Dulmen through the snow In wet clothes Just again as 'we were marching to the people, and for the older about did for me. Nowadays, when 1 paprika. the atreeta were pretty well filled with the prisoners were people may be heaped with A l entirely different sit In a draft for a second and catch bread house nnd the guard at tho door of mashed chestnuts whipped they n cream u through Dulmen was the people, nud they sprinkled with fineI When me. I fell hurt my spread over s custurd plo before the receiving camp for cold. 1 wonder that I am mill alive to tripped cneese. nit the streets they could, ao that all the whole western ly grated snappy front, nnd the pris- catch It. Having gone through Dlx wounds, which made me hot. Now I nierlugue Is placed, or on lemon pie, the people would have a chance to aee oners there got to be Parisian ApplesPeel the apples toil; mude and the Dardanelles and the hnd decided, on thinking It over, thnt makes s most unusual and delicious pretty the crazy men, aa they called us. Mont eggs, aa fur as Fritz was concerned, nnd cut them Into small balls with a best thing to do was to he good, addition. sinking of the Ccorglc and four Ger- the alr-cof the people were women, mu! as soon before they had been In to was I he cutter. Iut to cook In a rich released, expecting cuinp muuy man prison camps nnd a few other Chestnut Custard. Blanch, boll nnd potato as they saw us Coming, they begun days. . They thought nothing with lemon Juice and he flnvored would It I and thought tough luck ninsh of pick- things I shall through a rlcor a quantity of sirup trip over be killed Just before I was to be ranked with the bright peelto and singing the "Watch on the Rhine" or ing a fight with a sentry and giving hole In a church probablyand rind, breuk my chestnuts. To one cupful of the pulp enrpet Home other Germuo song, and It was him a good battle, even though he was neck. released. But I had been In the Amerof the apples for color. When Thnt would be my luck. add three egg yolks and one beaten ings U. 8. A. and the ican of cool and serve In sherbet funny to aee windows opening and fat armed with rifle and bayouek We navy any tender, gnrby There were all the diseases you can would hnve done what I did. It munt white, one cupful of milk, half a with the Jnloe poured over fraus, with sight-cap- s on, sticking soon learned thut unless his puls are think of In this camp. glasses Including black be the of vanilla extract and their heads out of the windows. They around a German will not stand by his cholera and them and a spoonful of sweetened training we get. for when a to sweeten. Pour Into a butteredsugar and somebody was typhus dish Is on once-ovc- r, trick off we would give us cream for a garnish. This qs his with and pulled dirty get In fists. arguments other quick always dying. We hod to nmke cofllns and hake slowly. Make a meringue whipped served with plHln boiled rice, pipe up like a boutawaln: "Schwcln words. If he cun outtalk you, he will from any wood we could find So It very nervous around the hands and ars with dish, the other two whites, with two la a not always able to control them. bund Vaterlaud Wneht am Rhein" beat you up, but If he cannot, It is a was not very wholesome dessert for chillong before we were using the tuhlcspoonfuls of sugar, and brown In dren. all kinds of things and all mixed up. case ,of Here comes Uclulo going dividing boards from our Bo I went for the sentry and walbunks, pieces the oven. So we gave Utoin Tipperary" and back." Chestnut Soup. reel a quart of of flooring hnd, In fact, the wulls of loped him In the Jaw. Then I received Curried Chestnuts. Shell nnd blanch The Pack Up Tour Troubles," Russian his and chestnuts nnd boll In salted wabayonet through the fleshy part of one island of prisoners at Dulmen tho barracks. Tho officers were quarlarge chestnuts; stew In chickshowed them how to alng. Our guurds were certainly a miserable looking tered In the wounds the brown peeling and forearm, gloat bayonet nniove ter; Iron barracks, so en stock until tender. Tuke two bad no ear for music and tried to atop bunch. They spent most of their time they hnd corrugated Add a tenspoonful each of fine. chop to borrow wood from us for that we got were In the arm. But of olive oil, or If that Is not us, but though they knocked several wandering around the Russian their coffins. We would make the box those arms were In front of our faces at hand use corn oil. Add a teaspoon-fu- l salt nnd sugnr, the rind of a lemon men down, we did not atop until we rotten at not for did time. the The of water. Bring te a holl sentries aim hunting potato peel- and put the body In It, It as much of sugar, a sliced onion, one and a quart our A on had finished the song. Then, after we ings and other garbage, which they service as we could. give can for for an hour. Ruh bet cook thnt. and arms, you slowly In the way of chopped apple, a tablespoonful of cup wound I nothhad admitted to each other that we would eat. When they saw Fritz prayers and hymns, and of kind be would a the got sieve, add two qtinrta of put It away in ry and a tablespoonful of sweet chut- through throw out his swill, they would dive a hole were not 'downhearted, we shut up. near the barracks. There was ing more than a white streak If prop- ney; moisten with a cupful of stock chicken or veal stock, a teaspoonful of parsley finely minced, a tablespoon-fu- l We would have done ao, anyway, be- right through the barbed wire one so much of tt thut a single death erly attended to, hut I received abso- or gravy nnd cook until the apple la of flour and a tnblespoonful of butcause by this time we were on the out- after another, and their hands and passed unnoticed. lutely no attention for It and It was soft, then ruh through a sieve, add a ter well blended.. Season with red pepa In was time I At long skirts of tha town, and we needed all face and clothes were always torn healing. that, One morning the German sentries and almmcr squeeze of lemon and simmer twenty minutes, stirthe breath we had.' The road we' were from It It was unhealthy to stand came to our barracks they never lucky; another bayonet stroke Just until the nuts have juice absorbed the fla- per until well blended. between the Russians and their garb- came But through stomach. on was Just one long sheet of tee, and my grazed ring singly and told us that an offvor. Serve with plain boiled rice. a sieve and serve. A yolk of egg addwe could hardly walk more than four age prey they were so speedy that icer was going to review the had been at Dulmen for three I prisoners Chestnut Sauce for Turkey. Add and ordered us to muster up, which ws weeks when we were transferred to two tnblcsimonfuta of flour to three ed to the soup Just before serving adds atep8 without slipping and falling. Sly nothing stopped them. One barley-coffe- e Just both nourishment and slight thickenafter morning. was shoes had wooden soles, and it was the last man out of the bar- Brandenburg, Ilavel, which Is known did. tuhlespoonfuls of the fat from the ing. I came out of the barracks racks Iand on hell-hol- e as the to the of Germany", just one bung after another, with the nnd time, account of my wounds I pan of the turkey. Add two saw an Australian arguing with was Chestnut Stuffing. Chestnuts aa a ice and myself trying to see which It certainly is not too roasting of slower than the rest prisoners. cupfuls boiling water and stir un- stuffing for fowl are a great delicacy. the was I not sentry, only curious, rould hit the hardest Every time we You understand I had had no medical strong a name for it, either. til smooth and thick. Benson with Boll and mash and senson well with fell smash 1 came a rifle over the but anxious to be a good citizen, as treatment except crepe-pnpe- r On the way we changed trains at banso salt, pcpiicr, and add a pint of mashed I went an they say, add bread and up slung back. dages nnd water ; my wounds had been Osnabruck and from the station plat- cooked chestnuts, a tnblespoonful of butter, salt, pepper, and ear Oth-r- r at them. The Australian had asked crumbs sufficient to make filling. saw form I was getting pretty tired, so I said Fritz German soldiers open up chill sauce or a few I opened by swimming from the Georglc of tabasco. drops what had been done with the and as such onion, seasonings, sage to some of the fellows thut I was goto the Moewe and they had been put with machine guns on the women and Iout Into a suuce boat and serve with tnny be added If liked. Cooking the flag that the Iluna were going to fly In terrible In coul bunkers. children who were rioting for food. the ing to sit down and rest and they said from shape the the Eiffel tower In Paris. turkey. nuts In a broth wifi also On they would also. So we dropped out Glnced chestnuts are a well-likeThat was too deep for Fritz, so the of account of the poor food and lack to the flavor of the stuffing. add much and waited until the guards behind CHAPTER treatment XXII. hnd not even started , they sweet Boll sugar and a little water bad just about caught up with us, and Australian answered It himself. Dont to heal. Incidentally, the only cloth S X X until It cracks when dropped In waFritz? no we you know, have Well, then we would go on. We did this use of being In the What's the Hell Hole Ths of us thnt had were of what bandages Germany." any dip the blunched nuts quickly In knocker'e section of the anvil chorus, ' several times until they got on to us, blankets, you know." we would tear from our clothes and I On arriving at Brandenburg we were ter; the sirup and place on greaeed plates Still the sentry did not get It So when the builders' committee of the and we could not do It any more. have seen men pick up su old dirty marched the three or four miles north- to coot booctcr club Is right next door wait. the Up the road a piece I fell again, and me Australian carefully explained to rag that someone else had had around west to the camp. While we were befor ywi? ing X X so that Fritz could hear that the 8 this time I did not care what haphis marched a wound streets for a the time and ing long through bandage Germans had no blankets and were If a man finds himself with bread In INVITING DISHES. woman walked alongside of na for pened, so I just sat there la the his own wounds with It both hands, be should exchange one middle of the road until Fritz came up. using the flag to wrap their cold feet some fiowera a In for to the So loaf of the was It all could do to I way, narcissus, boys quite talking mydrag since the !oaf feed the body Indeed, Instead of giving me the bayonet, he In. A hot soup at this senson of th This started a fight, of course the self along. The officer noticed that I English and asking them about the but the flowers feed the soul. Mamade me take off my shoes that is, will St found most acceptable war. said did She believe ahe not year was of line out and asked Immediately he took them off of me with a knife German Idea of a fight that is. The my name and nationality. When he anything the German papers printed. homet either noon or night a very brave man for a through the strings and I bad to walk sentry, being Creole Soup. Add to was she She an said American" not could heard he Englishwoman SPECIAL FOOD say FOR OCCASIONS. the rest of the way In my bare fees. German, blew his whistle very loudly, enough things about us and called me from Liverpool and that at the outsmall diced turnip and a It was about four miles altogether and sentries came from all directions. all the swine names he could think of. break of the war not being able to a large onion, two carrot we In are not all So to we alike It beat the Australian's barFortunately from the station to the camp. chilof out she her and of boiling water, hnd get waa time this thin at Germany, I cupfuls pretty our tastes. Foods of which one is espeWhen we got near the camp, all the racks, and there I found the second of rice so I figured I might dren had been put in prison and that a tablespoonful thinner, getting In will fond barnot American the He was a cially camp. boys came out of the barracks and 1 every day for over a week they had tomatc before of a It out ns well and have Just cupful he at all acceptable lined up along the barbed wire, and ber named Stimson, from one of the starved. Besides. I Cook until tenpuree. thought, he ought put her through the third degree ; that to He Western had bis states. was I heard neighbor. yelled ns a welcome. We asked them to know that we ore not used to being her children had been separated from der, rub through a sieve This diversity of If they were downhearted, and they there as well as the Boston man In the bawled out nnd she did know where not In her that this swine German add another by cupful of bollitg water, but he Canadian tastes had us been service, gives said no, and we said we were not eithwere. of fat, a teaspoon-fu- l two they country. tnblespoonfuls us look sick too to and In fact did up, many dishes, and er. We could hardly see them, but She walked along with us for several So I told him so. And I said that he of suit nnd a cupful of green peas. not care what was so he he is hnrd Indeed happened, we when got they begnn yelling nguln blocks until a sentry heard her soy should not .bawl Americans out, to suit who rnnnot Reheat and serve hot. nearer, and asked us, Is there anyone miserable. He had been wounded sevnot very complimentary to then He was something neutral. America Delicious Omelet Break four eggs find some to his likthere from Queenstown? and then eral times, and died In a day or two. said thut as America supplied food and the Germans and chased her away. Into a bowl Hnd bent Just enough to ing. Hull, and Portsmouth, and Dover, and I never knew how he came to be In munitions to we betwe When arrived at the camp were the allies she was no tho Australian service. Toronto and a lot of other places. Royal Sandwiches. Mix a half- - blend the yolks and whites. Add salt A put Into the receiving barracks and cupful . Those two nnd myself were the only ter than the rest of ulmonds, season with salt and put two tableRpoonfuls of butI did not pay much attention until The six condition the there of days. kept Then I said : Do you remember ter substitute Into an omelet pan red ndd two tablespoon nnd I heard. "Any Americans there? nnd Americans I knew of In this prison she entered Bal- these barracks was not such thut you fuls of pepjier, one set on the back part of the stove; and I yelled back, "Yes, where are you?" camp whether iu Canadian, Austra- Deutschlund? When chopped pickles, tablespoonlian or French service. Tho other timore and New London she got all the could describe It. The floors were ac- ful of Worcestershire sauce and one gently move the pan from side to side Unrrncks Grnppe 3." tually nothing but filth. Very few of two had been enptured in uniform, so cargo she wanted, didn't she?" Where from? I yelled. the bunks remained ; the rest had been tnblespoonful of chutney. Spread the to allow caeh portion to run down Yes." no was chance there of their from?" Iloston. Where're you being brend with cream cheese, and sprinkle next to the pan until the whole Is of Well, If you send over your mer- torn down for fuel, I suppose. The U. S. A. and Atlantic ports. released. Then fold and with the almond mixture, finely creamy consistency. (TO BE CONTINUED.) Dulmen was very nenr the Dutch chant marine they will get the same." See you Inter." on Suited turn a be crackers hot used may chopped. platter. he gave me ten days So, the next morning, I went over to border nnd as it was quite easy to get For thut answer In place of bread. Hot Tamales. Boll a fowl until tenWinnipegs Growth. his barracks nnd asked for the Yank. out of the camp attempts at escape In the guardhouse. lie did not likema-to 1870 Winnipeg was nothing to Prior Cream Sandwiches. a der, Windcor strip the meat from the bones nnd cupthat their merchant more than a chief trading post of the ful of chopped ham with s They pointed him out to me, where he were frequent. Most of those who raa be reminded fine. Chop half a pound of seedof chop was lying on the floor. I went over away were brought back, though. The rine hnd to dive under to keep away Hudson Buy company, whose head- a' ed raisins and a half cupful of stoned of chopped chicken; whpn cupful nnd laid down with him, nnd we had Germans were so easy on those who from the Limeys. quarters were at Fort Gurry (erected well blended season with paprika, salt olives with one small red pepper, also I admit I was pretty flip to this of- In 1835), on ground now included In quite a talk. I will not give his name tried to run away thut I almost thought nnd spread on buttered white bread. finely chopped. Mix nil together and when a not be One ficer, but who would here for certain reasons. they were encouraging them. the city. The first house of the stir to a paste with two cupfuls of Cheese and Pepper Sandwiches. He had received several wounds at chap was doing his ten days In the slick German swine officer bawled him , built In 1SG0. The city was Increnm cornmenl, moisten with scalding wasmall a senson Mash cheese, he time he was taken prisoner. He guardhouse for the sixth time while out? corporated In 1873, and its 'growth cream thick add to make ter and stir over the fire, cooking fifenough It was while I was In the guardhouse since hns been innrvelous. The area well, had been In the Canadian service for I was there that Is. he Hnd just about d Add six Season of with teen minutes. the ambasconsistency. American right the two years. We used to talk about completed his. period of detention. He thnt Mr. Gerard, of the city by 1012 was 12,700 acres. nnd mold Into a nnd chopped a eggs finely add salt, finely New York and Boston nnd the differ- claimed that the sixth time he had sador, visited the camp. He came to The population in 1870 was 300; In red pepper In the smooth inner mix place shredded roll; long as and wdl pepper, green six about months, across was border every the and this camp 1010 It was 102,000. ent places we knew in both towns, and renlly got sprend on buttered rounds of white husks of green corn, or the dried husks we also talked a lot about the rotten arrested In a little town by the Dutch rule. Even in the Germnn prison bread. may be used; tie with Rtrlps of the inforsomehow hnd men authorities Gerover to and turned got the the treatment we were receiving, and tried Lose Hair Suddenly. camps ' husk nnd boll for an hour In water. Sandwiches. fine Oliva to and Is Chop to cook up some plan of escape. But mans. Thnt In the western parts of New South against the law in mation about Mr. Gerard's efforts n pulp a dozen olives and a to Coffee In Junket Steep a tablespoonmost swore was pound but terrible he It the the surroundings meu one been are countries, we of Wales hnd could often think denuded of nil Improve every of crisp celery. Add an ful of coffee In a half cupful of milk, used by some one else, nnd either had truth. I am not so sure, myself. He w hleh the men lived. Some of the men their hair. A man will go to bed apfailed, or the Huns had fixed It so the got awuy for the seventh time while at Dulmen had been contlned In vari- parently nothing wrong with him and eighth of a tenspoonful of made mus- strain and ndd when cool to a cupful plan could not be tried again. We I was at Dulmen and was not returned. ous other camps and they told me thnt wake up In the morning to find that tard, one tenspoonful of catsup, two and a half of .milk warmed to the of cracker crumbs Juke-warTen days In the guardhouse Is not when Mr. Gerard visited these camps every hair on his body has fallen out tnblespoonfuls stage and a half tablet of doped out some pretty wild schemes at and fine a a so beor week men rubbed of did has been dissolved In a which for a such very the after cupful all maythat all, we became light Junket punishment that Altogether, great during the night This disease hus tablespoonsful of cold water; stir unpals, nnd were together as much as cause water three times a day is all afterward was to talk about bis visit never been known to attack a woman. onnaise. add sugnr to taste and Stuffed Baked Apples. Core good-size- d til possible at Dulmen. The day I left the prisoner received during that time, nnd what he had said to them. We Once the hair falls out In this fashapples and fill the centers with pour Into glass sherbet cups. When the camp, he gave me a ring made but It is pretty mild compared to some knew Mr. Gerard had got the Germans ion, nothing yet invented, will make a to make conditions better in some of new crop grow. raisins, sugar, cinnamon nnd bits of thick remove from the warm room and from a shell, and told me to get It safely of the things the Huns do. s In Germany and Serve topped with a One morning I thought for sure I the worst butter. Baste with water during the place on Ice, hnck to the States, but some one stole was going cafnrd. I was Just fed up the men were always glad when he of whipped sweetened crenm. No really great nmn eter It at Brandenburg. baking. spoonful thought The tender hearts of celery, If surOne day while I was In his barracks on the whole business and sick of do-- curne around. They felt they had some himself so. liazlltt Young Carrots. Place the scraped rounded by chipped Ice and served, carrots In a saucepan with a small make a most delicious accompaniment onion, a bny leaf, n little salt and ! A Different Bridal Veil. Veils in Demand. to the ment course. pepper. Cover with stock and stew J Bath Bags vs. Bar Soap. Keeps Embroidery Clean. Good business In bordered veils of At an Informal military wedding Cook together a until tender. Serve on a hot dlh Meringue. Orange Bnth bugs, refreshing and lathery, The way professional needleworkers kind or another Is being done at eranlzed recently In New York, the with seasoned mashed potaof bolltng water and a tablespoonran be made to take the place of the j retail, and the demand Is reflected in brides veil of point lace showed an keep a bit of choice embroidery per; pint of ' corn starch which has been toes. ful bars of sonp and will be found to the wholesale trade In the duplicate or-- unusual arrangement In the way of a fectly clean may prove helpful to oth- mixed with cold water. Add the Juice Deviled Ham. Chop, fine one pint .' ronke a big saving In the amount of dors received for them. Veils of this panel hanging from the top of the er workers lu this art. A piece of of two lemons, the whites of three of boiled ham, t largo part fat; odd h pure sonp used. Scrape a bar of pure type for holiday giving are very well .head to the hem of the train. It was thin muslin Is busted over the right eggs nnd three oranges sliced. ' Cook six d eggs, one tenspoonful s cnstlle sonp Into a powder, and one-ha- thought of. Especially good are fine meld In place with a flat Alsatian bow side of the material to be embroidered. with four nnd cornstarch the water of prepared kind. Mix the mustpKt It is then fitted Into the frame or hoop tnblespoonfuls of sugar, ten minutes, nnd p,r?KS Into j mold. This will keep pound of arris root, one-hnmesh veils heavily dotted with chenille, of point lace fustened with two pound of almond meal and one and dots often forming the border, jmond pins and orange blossoms. Two and the muslin cut away from the part then ndd the fruit Juice. Four this fof weeks, and makes a fine sandwich r one-hal- f Make Veils of this type are worn either tight 'maids gowned In pale green skirts of thnt Is to be Immediately worked pounds of oatmeal. Cover filling, , , over the oranges while hot. cheesecloth bngs four Inches square at the neck or hanging loose. Borders tulle, with round-neckesilver doth Thus the muslin keeps the hands from with a made from the whites and put a heaping tnblespoonful of tho of velvet and fur also are seen, these VhIIccs, wore flat green Alsatian bows coming In contact with the rest of the of the meringue eggs and three tablespoonfuls mixture In each less If you wish. being drawn close about the seek la fin their lmir and carried green moss material when manipulating the needl ' . of sugnr. Use same s a wash cloth. a rollnr effect. , buckets filled with asters. and holding the hoops. ir . ph-nt- J Albert. Depew OlFRANCEZSr time-honore- d Dul-me- n, half-cupfu- d e ul tuhle-spoonfu- ls bur-rack- s, d d 0-- two-third- ham-letW- hard-cooke- hnlf-cupf- m well-mixe- hell-hole- ! hnrd-cookc- lf lt din-the- d . varl-colore- d ItejUxlc 7 |