OCR Text |
Show THE SPANISH FORK PRESS. SPANISH FORK. UTAH, the m OKITCHENfe OsaCABINET ( 111, Wwitern Nwiiilr Vnlon ) Dopend upon U, you would t,aln unspeakably It you could loarn with me to see some of the poetry and pathos, the tragedy end the comedy lying In the experience of a human soul that look out through dull gray eyea and that speaks in quite an ordinary tone. -- George Eliot, BUILDING f ft L ',i , v fu'(4 vis 'viiityll A- l Highway Educational Work Ita Scopa fn VarU the Country, I The extent to the United dally pi oblein confronting the housekeeper the following umy help In planning the meals : Chicken . Vi WHAT TO EAT. In the r Pud-din- Ilutter a or dish a casserole, put !u two baking 4 y. left-ove- ,y' f tb SSL I 7, iy., ' 'A4v&-- At s 1 ; . f e ,R2 ip f: vV - 1 t i .3fL i i i 'x ; &? W , WESmUiSTER ABBEY ' V s A 4 4 t . a y lf lf one-four- th one-fourt- h one-fourt- 8 T one-fourt- h one-fourt- h one-fourt- h trttiL p, ti? il ,y v. t 'll mN I , ;4 r K, lf , J Bre themselves to a vay development is shoSnhv1 reachlug the federal high.. from all sections of the cou!L ctt In the face of high fcAL terlals and labor, and theZ fg!, ome states construction must be altered somewhat to lstlng labor and material coMi-there is no tendency upon the people to slow down m tbj,01 to place the nations hlghwan Jf higher plane In the coumry, tation system. Tersely are sold to the heels on U7ro tlon to construct highways release rather than restrict traffic they are dismissing labor and Ba,Z problems with curt Instructions i. their official servants that It f, M 1 them to deliver the roads, , A curious fact in connection with construction problems at the prew.Bt moment is that the building of road ii seriously hindered by the sane erfl which they are designed to remor lack of transportation. Accorim. authoritative infoi motion, producUoa i halted to a greater degree by toad quate transportation favlllties th&a by labor shortage. At least this is true,U Is claimed, In the production of n. terlals for road building. Highway officials state and county as well as national are facing their duties with patience and tact, and out of a maze of trying situations Is going ahead at a fairly rate. But as Paul D. Sas state highway engineer of gut, S' ift r chicken and pour cupfuls of f over the following: Two eggs beuteu and added to two cupfuls of milk, one can of corn, one teaspoonful of salt 47 and a few dashes of pepper. Put Into a pan of hot water nnd bake until Arm to the center. Pineapple Pie, Take one can of one-hapineapple, drain off the Juice, add the to and of bring sugar cupful AZC DE TRQT7EWE boiling point. Beat three eggs well Two soldier dead, jmked in the dark and add to the pineapple Juice; cook in a double boiler until smooth and From out of the untagged grave. thick, stirring constantly. Have a rich Unknown, unsung, without a mark pastry shell baked and Just before or glory of the brave Of fame serving time spread the custard on the Cemus clod or knave, or sliced on shell ; lay this the plueapple, IVe know their all they gave; which has been diced and cover with IPs know they died to save whipped cream. If no cream is at 'And one shall deep beneath the Arc band add a dozen marshmallows and And one in Abbey nave, set in the oven to melt and brown. With this to be by all men read: Tapioca With Pineapple. Souk one " In Honor of the Unknown Dead," cupful of pearl tapioca overnight in plenty of water, drain and add one-haJ. D. S. cupful of cold water, the Juice from a can of pineapple and the Juice Here to the Abbey, where all the greatest. of a lemon. Cook In a double boiler All of England's greatest dead are put to lie cupuntil clear, add one and one-hato Here the Abbey bring we this latest fuls of sugar then the pineapple One who for England knew how to die, In fold the stiffly fine; chopped lastly beaten whites of three eggs. Chill and Stanley IFenf. serve with cream or a custard using REAT BRITAIN and France celethe yolks of the eggs. brated the second anniversary of Caraway Rye Bread. Take the end of the Great War by payof suet, of a cupful chopped Unknown ing tribute to the melt In one cupful of boiling water, of an In London Dead. the three body scalded milk, add one cupful of was buried soldier one-hal- f unknown British of molasses, tablespoonfuls In Westminster Abbey. In Paris cupful of walnut meats, two teaspoonthe body of an unknown French fuls of salt, one fourth of a yeast cake was laid at rest under the soldier of of a In softened cupful Arc de Triomphe. warm water, two teaspoonfuls of carat Who won the Great War? Was it the Brltlbh, way seeds and three cupfuls each of Wus it Joffre, reIs the French, the Americans? mixture The flour. and wheat rye It sailor, airman, Was Foch? bulk Its double Pershing, tain, set to rise and when the seeds and nuts may be stirred In, artillerist? All helped. No need to make comparisons. if desired. Bake In two loaves or one For It was the man In the ranks who won the loaf and a tin of ruufflns. War. And that is what Great Britain and Great Use the Paste. Strawberry Turkish France are proclaiming to the world by thus canned berries; If the preserved berries are used no more sugar will be honoring the Unknown Dead. For Unknown Dead is merely a symbol. For neded. Drain the berries from the Dead rend Man In the Ranks 'Unknown h cupone and to sirup and fuls add three tablespoonfuls of gran- the common man who did his duty, offered his all, ulated gelatin; wdien softened boil 20 won his fight or gave up his life and Is unknow n, and unsung. No citation coutalns his minutes; at the end of ten minutes unhonored name. No decoration Is his. This Is the man and the of the berries one add cupful who won the war and It Is In his honor that the Julge of a lemon; then finish boiling. Unknown Dead are buried with the pomp and Tour Into a pan and let stand to become Ann. Loosen at one end, pull circumstance of state display. Nor need this man of the rank and file ever from the pan. With a round cutter, reached the firing line. Many a potential dipped In hot water, cut Into rounds have never hero got to the front. Nor need this man as Serve and dry. candy. thus honored ever have got Into the fighting ranks. Many a patriot who did his hit most W ought not to get books too loyally was rejected by the recruiting officer. If cheaply. No book, I believe, is over worth halt ao much to Ita reader aa he gave his country the best he had, he shares ona that haa been coveted for a year, the honors of Armistice Day. and bought out ot aaved halfpence, ' In honoring the Unknown Dead the lritish and and perhapa a day or twoa fasting. French give utterance to their recognitions That'a the way to get at the cream of a book. Kuskin. that democracy of service and of sacrifice which Is the foundation of society and the salvation of GOOD THINGS. SEASONABLE nations. The ceremony Is for the living even more than for the dead. The hash prepared from a boiled din-ue- r Unknown Dead Great Britain burled her makes a dish which is often more with the honors of a field marshals funeral. The enjoyed than the orig- body was that of a soldier, name and rank uninal one. known, selected at random from the silent hosts Corned Beef Hash-C- hop at Yprcs whether English, Irish, Scotch, Welsh, flue an equal quan- Canadian or Australian Is not known. It was tity of corned beef with received at Boulogne with the highest honors by the vegetables nnd a bit French and British soldiers. of the fat from the meat The casket was carried through lanes of solHeat three tablespoondiers at present arms to the British destrover fuls of sweet fat from Verdun. Flanked by four French nnd s'x British salt pork, turn in the destroyers, the funeral ship steamed the chopped mixture and add a few ta- channel to Dover, pnssing Into the harbor ns canblespoonfuls of broth with a dash non from the fort roared their salute of nineteen of paprika; mix all together, cover guns. Other honors to which a field marshal Is and let stand until hot. Stir oc- entitled were paid as the casket was carried from casionally until well heated, but do the destroyer to the special train for London. not brown. Turn on a hot platter, pour The historic Padres flag, used at innumerable a ring of potato catsup around the funerals after the fighting at Ypres, covered the hash nnd serve with coffin whose plate was inscribed: Baked Bananas. Take one banana A British Warrior Who Fell In the Great Wur, for each person served. Remove the 1914-191for King and Country. bananas from the skins nnd sernpe-wIThe Immediate guard which escorted the hotly the threads; melt a little butter on in Its trip through the crowded nnd silent streets a baking dish, cut the bananas in from the station to Whitehall was composed ot halves crosswise, roll In melted butter 100 men of all services who won the Vlctotla to coat them, then bake, basting with cross. The pallbearers were field marshals ami the butter occasionally. The bananas admirals of the fleet, Including Viscount Douglas will be tender In ten or fifteen minHaig, Earl Beatty, admiral of the grand fleet, and utes and lightly browned. MaJ. Gen. Sir Hugh Trenehard, commander of Mint Sauce for Roast Lamb. Wash British air forces. Buttnllons of guards, with a bunch of mint, shnke off the water, their bands, nnd a few officials made up the rest strip the leaves from the stems, chop of the escort. of the leaves fine, pour on King George was chief mourner, army officers a cupful of boiling water, add two ta- of the highest rank were pallbearers and the highblespoonfuls of sugar, cover closely est officers of the church assigned the warriors and let stand half an hour; then add body to Ita final rest. In addition, the entire empire sent representafour tnblespoonfuls of vinegar, or the tives to attend the services, and thousands upon Juice of a large lemon. Creamed Cabbage. Chop a small thousands massed into the streets to glimpse the head of cabbage, cover with boiling plain oaken casket, swaying on Its caisson as It water and cook In an open kettle un- proceeded from rntlway station to abbey. of a cupAside from members of the royal family, who til tender. Melt of included Queen Mary, Queen Mother Alexandra cook It In ful of butter; a cupful of flour, salt and pepper to and Queen Maud of Norway, and a few officials, taste and two cupfuls of milk ; cook the only witnesses to either ceremony wero peruntil smooth. Arrange the cabbage sons who lost relatives In the great war. Of all the witnesses that packed Whltchnll or in a baking dish In layer with the sauce and grated cheese. Finish with crowded the abbey, a little band of approximatebuttered crumbs nnd bake until ly 100 women In the abbey received the most reverent attention. They had been selected for the brow n. Beats of honor because each had lost her husband and all ber ions. Every woman in Eng which the State-- , 4 ti land so bereft who applied fer a place got It, but less than half the other applicants for seats were successful, owing to the lack of space. After the 100 had been promised seats, the next to be considered were those mothers who lost their only sons, or all their sons, and then came women who lost their husbands only. They were given positions In accordance with the price they had paid during the war. A girl who wrote she had lost nine brothers killed or missing was given a d ticket, as was also a boy w ho w rote : The man in the coffin might be my daddy. As Big Ben, the great clock In the tower eff the parliament building, began to strike the hour of eleven, King George, facing the coffin of the unknown soldier, which was resting on a gun carriage, drew a cord that released the union Jack draped about a cenotaph in Whitehall erected to the "Glorious Dead," and after the last stroke of the hour, thousands of people, who crowded Whitehall as far as one could see In either direction, remained absolutely silent for two minutes. During the brief services In the nave of the abbey the king stood at the foot of the grave, the royal ladles nnd princes ranging themselves cm either side. The ensket was transferred from the carriage to the altar where the archbishop of Canterbury conducted the solemn funeral ritual. As the coffin finally was lowered into Its crypt, a battery of artillery In the adjoining St James park, fired a field marshals salute of 19 guns the highest military honor accorded anyone outside royal rank. Official and civilian France paid honor to the memory of the nations sons who fell during the Great War, the ceremonies lending a solemn atmosphere to the celebration of the second anniversary of the armistice. Baris, accustomed to observing Its victory days and national fetes with rejoicing, turned aside this year nnd dedicated the day to memory nnd recognition of (lie sacrifice by hundreds of thousands of dead, who ure sleeping In cemeteries along the battle lines. Culled from Its grave on the field of Verdun, the body of an unidentified French poilu wns carried with pomp and ceremony through the streets and reburied under the Arc de Triumphs. The bodies of eight unidentified Freni h soldiers, exhumed from ns ninny sectors of the former bottle line, from the Belgian frontier to the Vosges, arrived at the Verdun citadel the day before. In a low casemate the eight bodies lay In state that night surrounded by a thousand lighted candles, while stern men and weeping women filed On a stand nearby were silently pa-t- . trophies from the City of Verdun which were to lie deposited upon the coffin of 'the unknown soldier chosen nnd to accompany the body in its Inst Journey to the Arc de Trlomplie, there to rem.iin throughout time. The trophies were the Croix de Guerre, the Insignln of the Legion of Honor, in Military Cross, the Order of Leopold, the His! tlngulshed Service Medals, sabers of hi pre sented by Chinn and Japan, the Greek War Cro.s. the Italian Military Medal and numerous others. One body was chosen from among the eight by Private Atignt Thin, a native of Caen, Brittany, who wns a volunteer during the war. At the request of Andre Mnglnot. minister of pensions the veteran placed Ills hnml on one coffin nnd the veterans choice was the Unknown Dend of a solemn and Impressive ceremony. In addition, France took occasion to remember that fill years ago the country, defeated by owed Its very existence for n time to Lom Gumbettn, who took virtual control of affairs In Paris when the city wns besieged by Germans and Inter succeeded In organizing armies to continue the futile struggle against the Teuton Invaders. The heart of Gnmhcttii, which had been preserved since his death In 1882, was Intirned in the Pantheon, the national shrine of France. Tlie procession formed In Place Donfert nt 8 .!() o'clock, the head of the column standing in the shadow of the huge statue of the Lion of Belfort, which represents the spirit of the twelve-year-ol- vAr y MM... si-i;U- TAPS TO THE 'y JOLDER DEAD city lu offering bitterest resistance to the Ger-inu- In 1870. First came mutilated soldiers and veterans of the Great War, then troops from Alsace and Lorraine and then colonials. General Rerdoulat, governor of Paris, followed, preceding flags used in the late war, behind which came Genera! Falque nnd staff, bearing artillery flags, and General Deresens nnd staff, above whom waved cavalry standards. Faded and shattered flags of 1870, recently retrieved from Potsdam and Berlin and carried by veterans of the Frauco-Prussiu- n war, escorted the car bearing the heart of Ganibetta, who resisted desperately giving these very flags to Prussia In the hour of defeat. A delegation ot noncommissioned officers of all arms separated this car from the 155-gu- n carriage upon which lay the body of the unknown soldier. President Millerand and all members of his cabinet walked behind It, accompanied by the three French marshals Joffre, the hero of the Marne; Foch, whose genius accomplished the final detent of Germany, anil Petaln, whose defense of Verdun will forever live In French song and story. The procession terminated with delegations from the St. Cyr and Polytechnic schools, republican guards, colonial Infantry, Senegalese units, aviation officers, two batteries of 75s nnd one of 155s. As the procession entered Boulevard Salute Michel there was honrd In the distance, from the forts surrounding Paris, the first shot of a n 100-gu- At salute. 9:20 oclock the procession reached ttie President Millerand ninde a Pantheon, where short address. It then continued down Boulevard St. Michel and Boulevard St. Germain, crossing the Seine by the Chamber of Deputies bridge. It circled Place de la Concorde, pussing the statues of Lille and Strausburg, anil proceeded up the Chumps Klysees. It reached the Arc de Triomphe at noon. Armistice dny was observed all over (he United States and tn many ways. No national celebration wns held nnd where (lie buglers blew taps to American dend it was to the Soldier Dead" and not to the Unknown Dead." Secretary of War Baker was asked to authorize tiie removal of tin body of an unidentified American soldier from France for Interment In the pliinned Victory hall. Pershing square, New York dtv. lie refused the authorization. Mr. Baker snld that If the United States were to follow the exumple of Great Britain and France sueh Imrlal of an American soldier should he In the amphitheater nt Arlington or In some of the government public buildings. He said tlint (he removal of a body to the planned Victory hall In New York would set a precedent nnd that many other elties nnd towns would "not be contented to be denied the same opportunity to show reverence nnd respect. Whatever the result, an American precedent lias been already M't. In fact, Amerten set It Tor Ha world. In Arlington rises a monument, dedicated more than hnlf a icntury ago with ceremony, on which Is this inscription: "Beneath this stone repose the hones of two thousand otu hundred nnd eleven unknown soldiers gathered after the war from the fields of Bull Run and the route to the Itnppahnnnoek. Their remains could not be Identified, but tliclr nmnes and death are recorded In the archives of their country nnd its grateful eltlrens honor them ns of their noble army of martyrs. May they rest In pence. Sept. A. D. 1800." Armistice dny seems destined to eon.e to mean to the whole world what Independence day means to America. How better express that meaning than through honors to the Unknown Dend? - Good Roads Enable Farmer to Market His Crops With Leaot Possible the American Asso- and president of out of Highway Officials, pointed In a meeting at Philadelphia recently when the people finally decide to the development of any parties lar road project, they are prone to eovernight xpect the work done almost ciation WHAT GOOD MEAN HIGHWAYS Ditftr-s- nt Farmer to Got Their Lew Crops to Market It ExpenxPossible Enable roea and "Farmers are business order to conduct their ... businesslike way and co! business men In the state devise ways and mran the expenses of operation, Blrdsall In submitting the Illinois Agricultural t f ? ., .g. 98 He added: "In no ? red' pense of farming be ,,od r securing as by pletely wl,i.h nlng by the farms ma the delivery of crops to 'J . ,0 the least possible That Is good sound com- - t far Ing from a practical that farmers aie keenly need and value of I,nP Mr. Blrdsall lu.vs furtb" the need of seloiTing b men for potent that the best talentami for road building w tbr on f Jj e tullab! repau GRad,N6 AND ROAD DRAINING I Se 0 Cmrai Highways Out of Ca d When Days In Year Patrol"''1 by Goed m f Ut 0 The first step Is to grade and dmn H 1) . h , jnt, fa that i ex Irginl leftn aft It thoroughly. driving over enrth roads, to sie ,lranlng iii road can he bind by and !, f0ml!"il grading alone, Is 4tr0H Ing the .vonr It p K01 when enred for by Is am hf All Demand B,thrRftrr' The business man, truck driver, the demand all asking and roads. i Cash for Uncoln An allotment of been made for lmpr0 Lincoln highway. War Destroyed Jl ovem ker, Si Sei tl tei r oil t ,tr br mdol Is ' n I. i H'jjjj ts to r W ttl he ampl tin ison all i Sei U i |