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Show THE WEEKLY REFLEX, KAYSVILLE. UTAH tMI PROF. HANSEN AND ALFALFA How 'owi Scientist Secured Resistent Plant to Supplement Those of Northwest. . Professor v. called upon to go to E ssi and. Asia as the nations first p. in' explorer. It is told in the Re--, v of Reviews that Janies Wilson, a JOU It fHHF e of agrirr.lfure at that t' u" it pm had Professor Hansen known Inn. u ia . t. Svud fceuJels oftliilall tothe ftrtl instructed tmt and uas fit he J' the j agalr-llson to secure brought i.s there is unkmdrss is rotary in ronie face to f ce and haw- it out and cold resident plants of i old - Ilobei t i?n th before love ftr o ci mmdrciul value to supplement the e cf the northwest or other parts of ECONOMICAL DISHES. TV Ill-1.- 'I 4 THE UTAH BUD' e Jt-re- -- .'eert-Uir- di-ti- ut copy-.h- 1 -- b-- Se j a- - I - Meats which are r.ot tu.der enoiuB to sene as steaks, chops? or rt asts arin ore as nutritious as those which c All tQtU tncat money per pound should be cooked long and s vy at-a low temperaturp Grillards. Chop a medi tn sue-bfiion fine," dredge' ,tw rth in hot bacon fat . util blown. Add cut in two pounds of round te. small pieces Season well " lth salt anil paprika; add a cup of canDed tomatoes free from juice and water sufCook ficient to coier the back' part of the range, well toured, for two hours. Gcrma n Meat Balls.- 1 r;all the fat and skin from a pound of round steak, put over the fire w iti a quart of cold water, one onion, a stalk of of parsley and celery, a teaspoonful of salt. Cook one hour. So&k a large .slice of in water, squeeze until dry, then r x one pound of the round steak niinci : fine; add a l -- o- - - - table-spoonfu- -- l of beaten egg and two tablmelted butter, one tea spool al of salt and a dash of pepper. Maki arto halls as large as an egg and boil t. n minutes in the.broth. Brown'ci t. of flour in a tablespoontal of butter, strain the broth and atd it. stirring until thick. Pour the praty over the meat balls and serve. Meat Loaf. To each pound of chopped beef add two ounces of fat pork or suet; mix with a fourth of a cup of bread crumbs, one teaspoonful of salt, seasonings of herbs and a beaten egg. A few drops of vinegar or. lemon juice softens the meat fiber and makes it more digestible. This loaf may be steamed one or two hours or put into the oven and baked, basting occasionally' Any. of the loaf, left over may be dipped in egg and crumbs, fried and served as cro- . quettes. and' Cheese. Slice stale bread half an inch thick and lay In a pudding dish with alternate layers of cheese and a little salt. When the dish is full and the cheese Is on top, pour In milk slowly until the bread la nearly covered. Cover and bake half an hour; uncover and brown. The bread will puff up and look as good as it tastes. Baked Bread Would you have your frtnd live better life? Picture that better life In your of never his and thoughts by word or look emphasize the opposite UNUSUAL DISHES. This is rather an uausuql way of serving frankfurts. Beil six sausages fifteen minutesv cool and remove the kin and cut in small bits. Mix three tablespoonfuls of flour with one and a half topfuls of milk. Add the sausages, season with half a teaspoonful of salt, a few dasher of cayenne For a change from (he usual baked apple, steam some cored greenings until tender;- - then just before serving, glaze them with a few spoonfuls of sirup. Serve with cream. - Almond Balls.-- : Pound a half cup of blanched almonds to a fine pulp. Beat two ggs well, season with salt, cayenne and a very little chopped pars-le- y; then add the' almonds and three-fourt- hs of a cup of sifted flour and a . -- teaspoonful of baking powder. Roll with buttered palms Into small balls and boil in the Soup' just 'before serr--lnThe length of time for cooking depends upon the alze. .If the size of a hickory nut six minutes will cook them. Cheese Croquettes. Cut into small dice-one cheese. pound Have ready a eup ofhor white sauce, ' add to It the cheese, the yolks of tw--o wetLbeateaeggadilutedwith- - aJittls cream. Stir until well blended, season with sak, red pepper and a grating of nutmeg. Set on ice until cold, then form croquettes, and - roll - in fine crumbs. Dip in egg. then in Crumbs again, and fry in deep fat Chicken Souffle. Mix together k tablespoonful pf melted butter and one of flour; stir in & pint of milk or cream, a little onion juice, chopped parsley and salt and pepper. When thick, add a cupful of chopped chicken and the beaten yolks of two eggs. Cool, and add the beaten - whites. Pour Into a buttered dish and set in hot water and bake in a moderate oven until firm. Serve with mushroom sauce. Scotch Broth Take the liquor that mutton has been cooked in, remove the fat and add turnip, carrot, onion and a little celery. Boil until the vegetables are tender, and serve. . a . Having crossed through northern Europe, and made his way eastward and then south westward across Russia again, the professor turned southward through transiaucasia, and then sailed ov r the Caspian sea to the Here he realms of the Turkoman came faceJo faceyv lth the problem in, the discovery of a hardy alialfa. It was almost like discovering a new Here was an alfalfa that continent 'nature, doubtless through thousands of years had inured to dr ucht and Hardiness cold It held hardiness had betn worked into" it by natures slow processes as the plant had traveled with infinite pains from the His Luck. Sure, ite Mike, the boy, thats the lucky man." How was he lucky? ). Why, mum, he got insured for and the very next day be fell off the ladder, p&intia, and broke his heck. J5.-OW- His Escape. piano) Sister (at- the Herr Braun? Where t v 'Oi V - , U Little Sister Oh, 1 got sp to open the door for Fldo, and he slipped out at the same time. tl Cxv sc- sk 2$ V '. - x - p a1 - - - Dont yon v 5 y-- 1 w.'inpavetorEiratand next fall to . eC V v auto- - , y a2r the , O Monas&y of St Catherine the raising of the brazen 4rpent by Moses and finally the death of Moses. The Sinaltic Peninsula covers about 10,900 square was inlland there 40 room the for of plenty The years' wandering. traveler who sees the land today can easily understand why miracles were necessary to keep the children of Israel alive. It is an exceeding5 barren wilderness, ly largely composed of rocks. It only maintains a handful of natives, and it is believed that the number has hardly changed since prehistoric times. Though barren, the land Is very picturesque, and the red mountains rising abruptly Into the clear sky are EXT - - (Vi, l- -'t . prog-res- A--? - f J ,j i, - s -- Vf - US4-4- -- Ti I;J . . - out-of-th- g' - - gave-faciliti- faJff ? tfe r ?i jfci - es d DrUppi-'- g Boartis. 5 ; i7!'iew m " C'ean the resulting explosion peppertng M face with tine rock, and dirt. 1I wan Roy Boswell, 13 year shot in the right knee h James iender, a playmate, a th two were returniag to Ogden finmn A hunting trip near Wea-- Weber. Ten minutes after returning foot shopping to ir to her home ia Ogde-a. Sarah E. H.ll was dead. SB had been a suffererer t toberenl!, but her condition was no ihocgtt serious. C. Larson, who has been in th employ of the Phoenix Constrmrtfaa company atl'lntah, suffered th I W of four toes on his left foot wbe h was thrown under a U mon Pncihe freight train? David Edwards, the Piakertom detective who was shot by while Impersonating Leroy Cedes at Ogden, three weeks ago be able to leave the hospital wftbJ the next few days. With banquet s. a meesTev parade, fireworks, electrical display, speech-makin- g and a municipal bell, hfarray will celebrate the turning s cf th pon er at the municipal lighting plant In the near future, Utah Is to have one of th t fish hatcheries in th United State Boon after R. S. Johns, deputy United States fish cemalssfesei; decides upon the site where th IxIU-Ing-s will be erected. Mrs. Emellne 1L Curtis f Salt Lake took arsenic powder, by mistake when she got up front bed at aigkt and took the dose In the dork, betas a sufferer from aervonanes. death resulting a few hours later. Seemingly, Sirs. Harry YzsMkawa the white girl wife of a Japanese, who has been in the Ogden jniL sinew she shot! and wounded ter. bis band on the night of November 8, is to escape punishment on default. . In point of attendance and front th unusual interest shown to th week exhibited the exhibition of the Utah Art Institute, which closed in- - Sail Lake last week, was. far more than aay held previously. No atto'will be accepted by th police force from the man who sells, clock er cm liquor la Ogden after Sunday, according to the late, warning which was passed along the Lew under the orders of the eblef ef poMi-?- to the Holy Land the most interesting rejsjon In the world to Biblical scholars is" the Slnaitlc Along the difficult way he interthe and viewed natives, soldiers, peninsula. In one respect it is horses in the markets. He and his even more interesting than the compa.ny- gathered seed by baud out Holy Land, for the wealth of relics in the steppes. Then w inter overtook and manuscripts which It contains him a little to the northwestward of has hardly been touched by modern ' investigators. the Chinese frontier, and, risking his life made a700 mile - An important movement has now dash northward to Omsk on the been started by the universities, Transsiberian railroad, whence he scholars and religious leaders of started 'westward with his precious England to conduct a thorough search of the Monastery df SL Catherine, on freight of seeds. Mount Sinai, where It is believed that the oldest Bible manuscripts are to be found. . PROFIT IN DRY, FARM DAIRY existing Discoveries already made Indicate with jftac-ticcertainty that these manuscripts must be Farmers to Utilize Great Quantities of 'but for peculiar reasons very little there, Roughage to Best Advantage has been made in searching for tlppm DurMust Go After the Cow. 1S53 and 1839 the German ing the jears scholar Tlschendorf spent much time exploring (By G. L. MARTIN) the monastery library. "Dont sit down in the meadow and The monks were then very simple and hoswait for the cow to back up to be and' quite unfamiliar with the ways of pitable milked go after the cow." The basis the outside- world. They allowed Tlschendorf --to for the whole dairy industry is the do in the library. He used this he gs pleased cow, and if farmers ar& going to utilWith stupendously' profitable results to ize to the best advantage the great liberty himself. He discovered the oldest known Greek quantltie's of 'roughage that annually manuscript of the Bible, now known as the '"Co- are wasted on every farm they must dex Sinaitlcus. By some scholars it is dated as go after the cow. as the fourth century, and In that case it early There iw no way to 'convert the Is the .oldest. practical! y .eomplete manuscript of corn, the nay, the cToyer, 'the straw' the Bible. It consists of most of the Old Testathe kafir, the milo and the abundance ment, all the Jxew Testament and the Epistle of other green feed into a marketable of Barnabas. form so q.qlckly .and Bo economically This wonderful collection of manuscripts Tlsch-- . as by feeding to the dairy cow.- She endorf carried away without saying a word to works day and night constantly, both the monks. There are doubtless collectors today summer and winter, on week days who would j give fl.000,000 for these manuscripts and Sundays, in flood and drought; to When the monkg owIy realized that they had of convert the unmarketable waste robbe(J Qf one f th ft(18t preciouB p0B. the farm into a finished and valuable jsesBionsJn the religious world, they became very productof human food. angry, and their anger lasted a long lime. For years travelers who visited the , . , ar ,r fcBBU,re world Jnonastery reported that the, monks were f818 farm country m aaapted, the and inhospitable, and would not afford a feed is there, the marketing facilities surly reasonable opportunity for an examination of are at hand in most sections, and the their treasures. Many of these visitors reported products are In growing demand. their manuscripts that the monks were in a deplorable manner, using them as stands FEEDING FRUIT TO HORSES for cooking utensils and flower pots. Finally, in 1894, two brilliant Englishwomen Mrs. Smith Lewis and Mrs. Gibson succeeded Egypts Most Noted Mares Are Fed in the confidence of the monks and sewinning Noted for Largely on Currants cured permission to make an examination of the Endurance and Speed. library. Their search was richly rewarded, for discovered a fourth century palimpsest Figs during the fig harvest time they of St. Pauls Gospel In Syriac. This manuscript r form the food of the horses of Smyr-nais probably the oldest known Bible manuscript, - turn- or oats theyforCodex, even allowing it the hay. would barely equal it. In the West Indies the green tops oldest date mentioned, Mrs. Lewis Gibson found that in ..Mrs. and of- the sugar cane are fed to the to put the library In thorough order, and order horses. even superficially all that it contained In Egypt the khedives best mares reveal would require thq labors of a considerable staff on and these currants, are fed largely emonks- fruit-feknimals are noted for7 their of trained workers. Although-thto the two women, they were not willendurance and speed. , to admit any considerable body of investigaFor long weeks in many parts of ing to the monastery, in view of their tors Canada midfall apples form the of earlier years. horses only food. The movement aims to overcome the present In Tasmania peaches are greatly objections of the monks in a friendly manner. relished by the horses. Dates take the place of the usual The Sinaltic Peninsula is now In Egyptian territory. When the necessary funds have been colhay. corn, oats and bran in Arabia lected thp assistance of the Egyptian authorities E. V. B. will he sought In carrying on negotiations with , the monks. The Late pasture. Among the most precious manuscripts believed Sheep owners should realize that to be in the monastery Is the original of the having two or more feed lots is econ- Gospel of SL Luke tn the handwriting of the omy. As soon as one pasture is pick- apostle himself. This would be incomparably the ed bare, a change should be made. In most important Bible manuscript ever discovered. this way the pasture becomes fresh- The Syriac oopy of SL Luke's gospel found by ened and the weeds will be kept down the two English women and at present constibetter. Sheep do much better on less tuting the oldest known Bible manuscript congroznd when this system is used and tains evidence that it was translated from a relk original la the library. many more sheep can be kept. - - j s t " Making Chicken Runt. In laying out poultry runs make them of a size which will be convenient to cultivate and put a gate in wide enough to admit a team. Horae power1 is cheaper than man power; plowing is quicker and better than spading. car- ter Oxiord university. who waa convicted Jan vuluuiry manslaughter for the U3-in- g of Jose tatuhez on Aligns II. at Colion, has beta senteaced . to in slate prison. Charles Porter may lone his c? shibt as a result of picking iwta the-thi- ng d -- iAi jt-ar- as the' common alfalfas of the United States had traveled another way. These were taken from Persia to j Greece, in the fifth century B C. Thence they were carried to Italy and Spain, and after that to South America, long after which they were brought to the southwestern states They had never had an opportunity to spread northward through, lon centuries- - of time, becoming hardy by infinitely slow degrees, as had those of the part of Asia where professor Hansen had just made his discovery. .With the discoverers philosophy of plnnt hardiness, how eer, the hardiness of these npw alfalfas could "be transferred to other alfalfas, and a variety botfe luxuriant and hardy could be That Is. if this newly discovered alfalfa would not Itself do as a successful forage In the middle west of the United States But to do xvas to follow thia new plant northward, and find ir:' the Sr, me of the hardiest of The hardy. With Jhis in mind he set out!' He- - followed the trail across deserts, among wild and forbidding mountains, along routes Infested by bandits, tracing it by caravan for 1,300 miles to a latitude about level with SL Paul-- 45 degrees north in the very heart of Asia. , No Bid for Popularity. The man who is always protesting that the public is being Imposed on is liable to, become about as popular at the person who insists on interrupting a performance to expose the magician's tricks. its Value. thick a detective - ll-A- ! wonderful. all the sites Nearly on Which Closes Read ten Cbmnwndmenlo mentioned in Exodus and the other books of the Scholars, hold that..the original.. Gospel oJf..St. .Old Testament are identified by( the monks and There Is a peak called Jabal a physician Luke was In Greek. The apostle by local traditions Ras-e- s of Greek descent, and his gospel gives evidence Siifsaf, wbieh is said to be the exact spot of scholarly attainments. from which Moses witnessed the worshipping of Early chronicles state that the - man uscripts - of Sts- - Lukeis - gospel , w as. the. gQldSUcalf..by,JLhe children of Israel. It is a one of the treasures given to the monastery by small peak, giving an excellent view of a lkrge the Emperor Justinian in f,27 A. I) The' buildplain, which might very well have been the place where the Israelites Indulged tn their idolatrous ing contains numerous representations of the -... Mar toasdescribed.in Exodus theBe and festivities,"apostte writing gospel, appesr And it came to pass as soon as he came nigh have a close, association with the foundation of ! the establishment unto the camp that he saw the calf and the .dano. The library is known to contain about 500 aning; and Mosess angerwaxed hoL and he cast cient volumes filled with manuscripts In Greek, the the tables out of bis hands and brake them beneath the mount. Arabic, Syriac and other languages. As one of And he took the calf which they had .made of ,tbesa great volumes may contaitL-iiundre- ds manuscripts, the wealth of the library can only -- and burnt It in the fire, and ground. it to powder be guessed at Among Us curiosities Is a very and strewed it upon the water, and made the anclent-eomnlete children of Israel drink of it. manuscript of the Psalms, writ ten on its leaves in microscopic writing. Thepeakw h e re"MfH e s'lsrepu t e dto havewit-esso-d This monastery is the oldest continuously Inthis scene is part of the same group habited building in the world- - It was founded where the leader of the- - chosen people received the Ten Commandments from heaven. The local by Justinian in about 527 A, 1J)., and has been traditions assigning sites for all these ancient occupied ever since. It is surrounded by walls 30 feet high, and defended by ranhon, for it was occurrences seem very reasonable. cut off from the civilized world for centuries. DOUBLE VISION. Until recently everybody who entered was hoisted by a rope oVer these walls. Police Magistrate I lovnt O! seen yez here The earth on w'hich the vegetables of the twlct befure? monastery are grown was brought from the Holy Prisoner Only onct, yer ahner, an that was Land, for there is no soil In the vicinity. In the last Patricks day. first few centuries of the Christian , church the Police Magistrate St. Patrick's day, was ut? Sinaltic Peninsula was the refuge of many Christians fleeing from the Roman persecution. Then Wull, thot ixplalns uL Oi must av seen two of the church triumphed and for centuries after the ye. PUcbr founding of the monastery It was honored by UNPROFESSIONAL. gifts from emperors and kings." Then gsame the- Mohammedan outbreak. DurPowers Pm sorry you lost your lawsuit. ing the centuries when the followers of the Bowers Well, I ought to hare known that my Prophet overran the eastern world this little spot held out for Christianity. attorney .was no good. Powers Why? The convent stands at the foot of the mounBowers The very first time the case was calltain called Jabal Musa, which, according to many ed he told the Judge he was ready to" go oas authorities. Is the actual mountain where the Ten Commandments were committed to Moses Pock. by the Lord. The site of the mohastery, accordALL AT WORK. ing to this theory, is the spot where Moses de- Spot s -- -- I.., -- -- - livered the Commandments to the cMldren of Israel. This is a disputed question, but there is little doubt that it is an Important site, for the natives in all ages have revered lL Here passed the children of Israel during their 40 years wandering on their way from Egypt to the Holy Land. Here 'occurred the many, miracles and wonderful events jpf the Exodus the cloud by day and the pillar of lire by nighL the feeding of the people with manna, the miraculous production of water by Moses, the battle with the Amalekites, the appearance of the Lord on the mounL the building of the Ark, the worshipping of the golden calf, the budding of Aaron's rod. All of a sudden you dont seem to hear anything more about futurists. I wonder what has happened? Wait till the whitewashing season is over. Take it, from me, theyll bob up Into prominence again." " - BEST PRINT FOR THE EYES After making a c&refu) study of the various styles of type and their effect Point That Is of Much Importance upon the vision, the committee deand Is Not Given Proper glares that no child should be allowed to make a practice of reading any Consideration. printed matter unless each letter is Acca-dinto the report of a com- - jrlean cut and well defined- - Very )f Eftglish was found physicians, who iensed or compressed-typ- e have just completed an investigation jfo be very harmful for breadth is v tA th TfZ-J-P g con-mitte- e si P A LADIES rise-cessf- - t lice. g The absence ef snow in the sections ef Utah to not cans-'in- g ' elatfon1 among' th- - nbce-g- mea-Tb- e snow fall has not been sufficient to move the bands ef sheep Cross the summer range to the winter ranges of the desert. " Steve Marinats, who 'Knack a missed hole In th Utah CenseIiat-e- d mine at Bingham August IP, lfA has filed salt for J3 WX)p damages in the federal court. Harfats suffered numerous injuries tn the enpSesto. losing the sight of both eyes and part , of a hand. have been mad- - -Arrangement whereby the Utah Agricultural the University ef Idaho and th Oregon Short Line railroad wE3 Join : forces In fighting potato which have made inroads on th crops of Idaho and Utah the past two years. Physically a well and strong man, but still suffering from low ef memory, O. D. Wol raven, injured more than a month ago by being poshed from or by falling from th platform of Bamberger train, sear Ogde will seek work and remain in Ogden, where ha he Here he wfll In time recover from his low of memory. j The Central Utah Railway company, organized to buRd n nUsmS from Sali&a east through Safina yon to the coal fields for a d s,xme : of about twenty mRe. has svrveysro In the field few preflmtoary wrveys from which th most fesuLbi grad trill be selected. Provo win take step to secnr th new car shops ef th Salt Lake ft Utah Intermrbas railroad, th Provo road committee ef th leCLT club having prepared which will be sent to th dais, giving reason why th ilrrv should be located there. Mrs. Karen Larsen, widow, Z. t with her stepson ia Salt found dead en th kftetzn f her home, Sunday "i ( evident that she had .with heart fcffre work there th. tnzzz ' To extend t' trr ") railway connect tl c'7 1 c:3c and f IfO.OSJ I j sheep-grazin- - -- e4-leg- e, v nJ Put it in water," said the chief of suffragette bomb." Put it in Florida water. - Ah, police-, the dear girls.' and to differentiate m. na, no. nv, w and in. The general form of the letters should be broad and square, rath- by er than elongated vertically, and the letter o should approach close to the ? perfect circle. - al nJ t3 Z L' ' aonl. l' MAN. "A bomb." the difficulty of seeing the hair strokes. On the other hand, a very heavy faced type suffers in legibility through diminution of the white Interspaces, example, nhen the space In the upper half ofthtTc is reduced to a ahite dot T The ideal type HOX JOoSaJHJas jyell as ' Jv) lui Co-merci- i sleight-of-han- Dinner for every homeles pluied man in Salt Lake Ckrtscxaiaa vi.iv and a turkey dinner, the plan of .Major P. Mortens of taiv.it ion Arn'iy. M jfoaiJs er Delwja Thomas, a! the IniveJmty of Utah, has hers A a Rapiles scholarship. b mm L k kS aJu-- As bitter-experie-nce TUtlS-T-X. - ItnB-d-State- "Btrfffi br-a- , s re-ist- the- J'-'- k '..r.-rf- 1 rm-n- in The Twentieth United State to Sait Iaxke fantry said good-bySaturday morniqg. bavins hee w to the .Mexican border. grazing conditio as cs tie , Present a rte from . i to 4"0 per rent better than they were before the forest waa foainded. thn .Considering the population the largest percentage nf siinKil attendance in Utah fs (ound at Roosevelt, Uinta count y. A. L. Rtngling, aged 21, who sajs tha' lie ia a son of one of th ESag-l.Lgof art us fame, has been arresSr ed at I 'ru-- ou charges of Issuing had n t' C r' 1 |