THE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE, NORTH PLATTE, NEBRASKA. HOW SHIRS. BOY! HOW A SOLDIER FEELS IN FIGHT VNKS IN WRECKED VILLAGE MOtDEO AM OPE1TI0N Annlstnn. Aln. Hero Is the descrlp tlon of n big Imttle uh It Impressed It Bclf upon the mind of Sergt. Lawrence Hopkins of Oxford: They're off I "It fiends a thrill through you uh you hear their cry mid rlHe up anil find yourself In a crowd of men ; puns lng a moment to light our pipes or cigarettes and wo are hurrying for ward with glistening steel In our hands to meet the foe. "If It were not for these othur men moving along heavily laden to keep pace with the Imrrngo one might well stand In amazement at n wilderness suddenly become crowded with sway ing humanity, hravely attempting to weather the furious storm. ' "The hlg guns roll like heavy thun der, the little Held butteries answer with a hark, shells scream, whistle, howl, according ,to their moods. Death Is Everywhere, "The quick staccato coughing of machine guns goes on unceasingly all around you and Is swallowed up In Its echoes. There Is a sputter of rllle bullets as (hoy whiz by you and you wonder that you are untouched. Hnrbed wire tears our clothes to pieces; mud sticks them together again. Hints lly at our feet ami from the sky winged airplanes' swoop down. .Spitfire tanks plod on behind, crashing ami crushing j burning, boil ing oil sends Haines leaping to the clouds; molten phosphorus Is poured Into dugouts. There Is gas to blind and choke you. "There are laughs and cries; the laugh of a comrade as he struggles on, or the cry of another as he drops his rllle and puts his hand to his heart his last cry. There Is the yell of the hunter, the wild-crying despair of tho hunted. The plunk of the mor tars and the burst of the bombs add to the tumult of the storm. "Stretcher bearers rush to and fro, running zig-zag across tho battlefield with their messages. Then I drop Into it shell hole, the cold sweat running off my face, and breathe. Take my compass out, get direction adjusted and when the barrage lifts I dive Into the tornado again and so on. Ger mans nro scarce ; they arc down below. 'Moppers up' behind will deal with them. Over broken trenches and torn ground, slipping, fulling, sprawling, 1 Ko for our objective. As the curtain of tire and smoke passes over the vil lage wo make the final spurt forward nnd dig like h 1. Germans Fear Americans. "The noise Increases, tho guns get more nngry, shells ilnd showers of mud and dirt are falling all around you. Tho devil seems to be raking out lus furnaces, the sky seems to crash down on you, then my head tiwlms, my arms fall to my sides, my legi grow limp and I drop down as I hastily don my gas mask. And when 1 open my eyes and find myself I am on a stretcher and someone with a smile all over his bronzed face offers me a cigarette. "Yes, we ran tho Huns for six days and five nights, and l did not want to cat or sleep. I tell you It was grand, and If 1 hadn't been gassed I feel like I could still lie running them. Wo started In on tho IMth day of July, my birthday, and, mother, dear, I took no prisoners, "A German oflleer said to his men: 'Why do you run; Is not Gott mlt youV And the German soldiers an Hwered: 'Yes, but the Americans are mlt the French.'" I IMVFSTQ IMQIIRAMPP i IN BONDS AND STAMPS t : Dnltnn. Gn.--Lcft 510.000 In- siirance by her son, Amos liar din, who died from a wound re ceived In action In France, Mrs. ' .Mary K. Hardin turned the en tire amount Into Liberty bonds and War Savings stamps. Mrs. Hardin says she takes this meth od In helping the government and to avenge her son. Her husband, I'll J. Hardin, gave his life in order to save a fel low workman endangered from noxious gases In a well. For this act Mrs. Hardin received a T Carnegie hero medal and a pen- ! At our house we luugh nil' wo sins an' we shout An' whirl all tht- chairs an' tho tables about, An I niKSol my pa an' I Bet htm down, too, An he's all out of breath when the flghtln' Is through. An' ma says that our house Is surely n sight. Uut pa an' I say that our houpe Is all right. Kilgar Guest. , detachment of Americans are here shown on their way through tho French town of Hucquoy, which has suffered some very heavy bombard ments. This French oltlelnl photo graph shows the ruins of the village nnd the American troops passing through Therns de Calais, on their way to do their share In the heavy lighting which the Yanks did In this hector. I nffVsUjMl'A'of Gjrdrn I I I teaspoonful of lemon extract and turn Into a serving dish. Heat tho egg whites with two .tablespoonfuls of su gar and spread over the top for n meringue. Hrown and serve hot or cold. High Cost of Moving. Savannah, Ga. The high cost of moving In Savannah has obliterated the old saw that "It Is cheaper to move than pay rent." It now costs from $10 to S'JO per load to move, because of the extreme scarcity of labor and the high cost of upkeep. SQUIRT GUN WAS ONE HUN TRICK London. First Lieut. Ira J. Hodcsof Hrooklyn, N. Y., and Herkeley, Cal., praises Lieut. Audrey Grey of Herke ley as one of the gamest American olllcers he ever knew. Lieutenant Grey, fearfully wounded ami at the point of death, said: "Don't take 'me, boys ; clean 'em out first." Hy "cleaning 'em out," he meant for them to keep on driving at tho Ger man machlnu gun nests until they were abamloned. He did not want to Interrupt tho progress on that part of the line for an Instant. Lieutenant Hodes was wounded In the left leg tho same leg In which ho had been shot during the Spanish American war. DODGING ONE OF JERRY'S SHELLS tins rciutirlial'le Hiitlslt olllclal phntngiMpii. tiiK.u ..n i'sii m trout In Franco at the Instant an enemy shell exploded, was an Incident In the ad vance on Uapaume. A Tommy while doing a little sewing on his shirt out side a capturud German hut Is disturbed by the shell. "I wan Just out of the hospital," he said, telling of his last engagement. "I had been laid up with whooping cough. I had Just reported back and been assigned to command of Com pany . We wore ordered to advance first on Suturduy, August 31. We went ahead for two and a half miles and took tho German second line trench. Grey Gets .Fatal Wound. "The counter-attack came exactly at four, o'clock. Uut, of course. It availed nothing, because we were fully able to meet It with more than sulllclent re sistance. Our artillery had full sweep of the ground over which they moved. The slaughter was terrible. "We lay In the position all that night, and at seven o'clock In the morn ing made a pilck move. We took over a line of shell holes about three hun dred yards In front of us. Then we I started In to clean up the thick nests of machine guns. "Lieutenant Grey was -shot in the stomach and Lieut. Harry Ulalr of Hrooklyn was hit. Then I was hit. After 1 got It Hlnlr and myself carried Grey back to a dressing station. He lied tho next morning. Huns Did Not Fight Fair. "The Germans were lighting In n nasty way. It was not tho least bit afe to pay any attention to them when they ltgnn to cry "kninerad." Many of them carried a little pistol ailed a 'squirt gun.' It shoots a small bullet like a twenty-two, hi i sprays them out at short range. The pistols keep on shooting Just as long as you keep your linger pressed on the trigger. They are good for short range illy. Tho danger was In this: If you minded up two or three or more Ger mans and ordered them to throw up heir hands, they would, except that me of them would b a little slow. If wui started to lower your gun or pistol in take them In tow the slow-moving man suddenly threw out his squirt gun ml opined tire. The safest thing to in was to take no chances. "The Germans were doing all sorts I' things that were forbidden by Inter national code. They did not think any thing of tiring on the stretcher bear ers, although tho men were carefully marked with white bands on their arms nnd were classed as noueom-Imtants." FOOD FOR THE FAMILY. OU cakemnklng bar lev, corn, rlee.or po tato flour or part cornstarch may be used without mnte Tlnlly changing the character of the cake. Corn and Rice Flour Jelly Roll. limit the volks of three eggs, add one cupful of sugar and three tablespoonfuls of water, their add one-half cupful each of corn and rice flour with two teaspoonfuls of bak ing powder. Fold In the stlllly beaten whites of the eggs and bake In a mod erate oven ten miniitcs. Turn nut on a towel nnd spread with jelly ami ron. Trim the edges before rolling If at all brown.' Spiced Cornmeal Cakes. Heat three tablespoonfuls of fat with one-fourth of a cupful f molasses and when boiling hot add one-fourth of a cupful of sugar, one-half cupful of cooked oatmeal, one-fourth of n teaspoonful of soda, and one and one-half teaspoonfuls of baking ' powder ; cinnamon and cloves to taste, one nnd a half cupfuls of mixed Hour, and one-fourth of a cupfuls of raisins. Hake In niullln pans .?0 minutes. Cornmeal Gingerbread. Cook to gether Id minutes one nnd onc-bnlf cupfuls of cornmeal, one-half cupful of corn sirup, one teaspoonful of salt, two tablespoonfuls of corn oil, one-half cupful of molasses, one nnd one-half cupfuls of sweet milk and one cupful of sour milk. Cool and ndd a beaten egg, one cupful of barley flour, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Add teaspoonful of cloves, a teaspoonful of soda, and one and one-hnlf tea spoonfuls of ginger nnd cinnamon. Chocolate Barley Cake. Cream one- fourth of a cupful of shortening, ami three-fourths of a cupful of sirup, a snltspoonful of salt, one egg, two- thirds of a cupful of cold coffee, one and three-fourths cupfuls of bar ley flour and one and one-half teacupfuls of baking powder. Add two squares of. chocolnte melted over hot wnter. bent well and bake -'0 minutes In a moderate oven, Corn Flour Sponge Cake. Separate the yolks and whites of four eggs, beat tho yolks, add one cupful of sugar and n tablespoonful of lemon Juice, a pinch of salt and one cupful of corn flour. Sift the flour several times and fold In the stlllly beaten whites. Hake In u slow oven. We play at our house and have all sorts of fun, An' there's always a game when the supper Is done. , An at our house there's marks on the wall "nil the stairs An' some terrible scratches on some of tho chairs An' ma srj'b that our house ts really a fright. But pa nml I say that our house Is all right. Kdgar Quest. The law of human helpfulness uhks each man so to rarry himself as to tiloan and not blight men, to make and not to mar them. nfftltionalWarGardtri n 111 ComiTiUXiri Hi SEASONABLE FOODS. VXY are the vege table combinations which have never been enjoyed by the vast majority of households. We con tinue to travel In the same old ruts, serv ing things as our grandmothers did be fore us. Let us break away from old ulcus anu learn some thing new. Eggplant With Rice and Vegetables. Spaghetti, noodles, rice, macaroni or bread crumbs may be used in tins lish. They should all be 'cooked In the usual manner except the bread. For one eggplant allow one cupful of un cooked macaroni or one-half cupful of rice. Cut the eggplant In slices, paro and cut In three-fourths Inch cubes. Cover with boiling water and let cook 20 minutes, then drain In a colander. Melt two tablespoonfuls of fat In a saucepan ; add one largo onion chopped fine, one-half of a green pep per shredded fine and let cook slowly, stirring often until yellow and soft ened; add the eggplant, the rice, half teaspoonful of salt, a dash of pa prika, a cupful of grated cheese and a cupful and a half of tomato. Stir and cook until well heated. Turn Into a greased baking dish, cover with three fourths of a cupful of crumbs mixed with three tablespoonfuls of fat and cool: in the oven until the crumbs aro brown. Chocolate Pudding. Melt three squares of chocolate in three enp'N of milk, four tablespoonfuls of honey, two tnhlcKpnoilflllH of ; III i ' the-tnixture Into a wet mold and set away to harden. Serve with sweetened whipped cream or cubes of marshnial lows may he added Instead of sugar. Codfish With Brown Sauce. Soak two'Ctipfuls of salt fish In cold wnter for an hour. Drain and fry In six ta blespoonfuls of corn oil until slightly brown. Add three tablespoonfuls of flour, V,z cupfuls of water, the fish, one clove of garlic chopped, one table spoonful of minced parsley, a few gratings of nutmeg and a fourth of a teaspoonful of paprika. Coolc all to gether and serve on a platter sur rounded by a border of cooked rice or potatoes. Canton, Ohio. "I Buffered from fomalo trouble which caused mo tnucb BUUerinjr, and two doctors decided that I would hav to go through an operation belore 1 could got well. "My mother, who had been helped by Lydia E. Pinkham Vogotnblo Com pound, advised m to try itbeforo sub mitting: to an opera tion. Itreliovcdms from mv trouble to I can do my houao work witljout any difficulty. I advise any woman who afflicted with female troubles to give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound n trial and it will do a3 much for them." Mrs. Maine Boyd, 1421 6th. St, N. E., Canton, Ohio. Sometimes there, aro serious condi tions whero a hospital operation is thr only alternative, but on the other hand so many women havo been cured by this famous root and herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, after doctors havo said that an operation was necessary every woman who want to avoid an operation should give it a fair triil before submitting to such a trying ordeal. If complications exist, Write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., for advice. The result of many yean experience is at your service. Calf ne'mies WHITE SCOURS BLACKLEG Your Veterinarian can stamp them out with Cutter's- Anti-Calf Scour Scrum and Cutter's Germ Free Blackleg Filtrate and Aggressia, or Cutter's Blackleg Pills. Ask him about them. If ho hasn't our literature, write to us for information on these products. The Cutter Laboratory Berkeley, Cal., or Chicago, III. "Th Laboratory That Knows How" EXPLANATIONS NOW IN ORDER What I must ilo, Is nil that concerns nio, not what pcoplo think. Kmorson. Money Burns Their Pocket lerlcan li their Purls. No wonder that Am soldiers nstound the French with money-spending proclivity. Shops stocked sulllclently In the ordinary course of events to Inst six months are frequently cleaned out In u day wlton the Yankees arrive. The Amer icans J'int simply buy everything In eight. A bunch of troops Just arriving from tho long Journey overseas, or perhaps having been shunted around .a month or so after landing, reach a permanent camp and are paid off. Frequently they haven't had a pay day In two or three months. Then with their pockets full of the strango francs they go to town and make up for lost time. They overlook nothing from a Swiss wntch to nn arm ful of souvenirs to send back home. Hut with all tho spending and buy ing It Is rcmurkshlo that there are so few cases of drunkenness. The wine certnln bonis, generally from 5:.'K) to 8:110 p. m. Hut the average American does not like French wliu, at least not ut first. French beer has a flat, weak taste which does not appeal at all to Americans. There 1 tto whis ky, nnd even were It uvullablo the Americans would not bo allowed to purchase It. Cognac H tho nearest ap proach to whisky nnd this must bo obtained by stealth sort of a boot legging process. . Many thousands of American sol diers, disgusted with tho light wines and beers which only they may pro cure, have foresworn hooxu entirely, gone on the "water wagon" for keeps and will be In good trim for the tin-tlon-wlde prohibition they will face when they return to the United States. HARD DOLLARS WORRY GOTHAM OLD-TIMERS New York. For the first time In approximately fifty years the good old American silver dollar has again made Its appearance on Hroadway. Many "old-timers" linger them gingerly, tnko a bite, shake their heads and mutter "phoney." Nevertheless, the dol lars are good ones. They are ftrrlvliiR In tho pocket's of France-hound soldiers from the Middle and Western states, mid, well, the majority of them will not be spent In France. Changes German Name. Atlanta. Oa. John von Hadeln, an American with a flernmn name, testi fied before the federal court that he could stand the reflection no longer. I So his name Is now John F. Vnughn. hopH nre open to the American ui , every day The business of the Loudon stock exchange under peace conditions, re- pilies the services of W.OtX) persons Vaughn declares he has not n drop of , German blood la tils veins. SEASONABLE DISHES. ( N'KKD Is there In tliis day ' of plenty to serve monotonous meals; even substl tutes may he varied so that there will al ways be something different. The fol lowing m a y u o t prove agreeable to all, but from these. one may Ilnd suggestions Which will be helpful In varying the 'menus: Mushrooms au Gratln. l'eel a half pound of fresh Held mushrooms, sprin kle with salt and let stand a half-hour. Fry one onion sliced in two tablespoon fuls of cooking oil ; add two table spoonfuls of flour and when well blend ed add a cupful of stock made from cooking the stems of th mushrooms. Cook until thick; add a half-teaspoou-ful of salt, a few dashes of pepper, and pnprlkn. Add the mushrooms to the sauce; put Into a baking dish, add a' half-cupful of bread crumbs that have been mixed with one tablespoon ful f sweet fat and bake until brown. French Vegetable and Meat Dish. Fry onions in a little fat, add soup stock, chopped meat, a few hits of chopped cabbage, carrot and potato. Cook slowly until the vegetables are tender. Add prune Juice and boll five minutes. Turn the stew In a platter and surround with prunes. Potatoes, Peasant Style. Wash, pitre and cut Into dice enough pota toes to make a pint and a half; fry un til brown In six tablespoonfuls of ha con fat. Remove the potatoes and add two cloves of garlic chopped, two tn blespoonfuls of chopped parsley to tho fat In the pun ; conk for two minutes ; add two tablespoonfuls of corn Hour, a tiaspoonful of salt, paprika and pej per to taste; two cupfuls of milk, and when well thickened add the potatoes ami serve when hot. Lemon Tapioca Pudding. Cook a half-cupful of granulated tapioca In four cupfuls of milk In a double boil er twenty minutes. Heat two egg yolks with four tablespoonfuls of su gar and four tablespoonfuls of corn sirup. Add the grated rind of half a lemon and stir Into the tapioca. Ook untlV thick and creamy; udd one nffijlional WirOl'dtlji TQOTHSOME DISHES. X TI1USI2 days of substitutes and con servation we need to put more thought and planning Into our meals to have variety and whole someness. Chatel Potatoes. Wash, p a r e a n d slice thin one quart of potatoes; arrange in miuereu mus ing tlish. Add two cupluls of strained tomato, two cloves of garlic finely chopped, one and a half teaspoonfuls of salt, and a teaspoonful of paprika. Hake one and one-hnlf hours. Chilled Eggs. Cut six bard-cooked eggs In halves lengthwise and remove the yolks. Cream four tablespoonfuls of sweet fat with the egg yolks and six sardines, bones apd skin removed, with one-fourth teaspoonful of mus tard, salt and red pepper to taste. Stuff the eggs with this mixture and place on Ice for an hour. Tomatoc With Curry. Cut the tops from six medluni-sly.edtonm"tocs: re move the pulp with a sharp spoon and cook It with three tablespoonfuls of rice and sulllclent boiling water until soft. Add a tablespoonful of fat. a cup of bread crumbs soaked In two table spoonfuls of colli milk, one hard-cooked egg yolk, one-half teaspoonful salt, a clove of garlic chopped, and pepper to season ; a bit of parsley and thyme and a half-teaspoonful or curry powder. Stuff the toinateea and place In u pan with water In the bottom. Hake until the tomatoes are soft but not shape less. Mexican Rabbit Mix one cupful of freshly boiled rice with one cupful each of canned corn and tomatoes, one-half a green pepper cut in shrefls, one slice of onion scraped or chopped, half n pound of chopped cheese, a teaspoon ful of paprika or less, a half teaspoon ful of salt and two well-beaten eggs. Turn Into a well-greased baking dNh. Sprinkle with crumbs mixed with melt ed fat and bake In a moderate oven In a dish set In water. Serve when the mixture Is firm In the center. Strange M.lxup of Names That Caused Some Misunderstanding In Talk Over the Telephone. It is necessary to preface this llttlft story with the assertion that It was not created by a punster, but that it actu ally happened, reports the Indianapo lis News. In the purchasing agent's ofllce of one of the largest. If not the largest,, corporations In Marlon county, there was a clerk named Shnw and a stenog rapher named Smart. The wife of the purchasing agent called over the telephone one day and asked for her husband. "He has just stepped out," replied Miss Smart, who answered the phone. "Oh. pshaw" exclaimed the purchas ing agent's wife. Misunderstanding, the stenographor replied, "Why, he's not here, either." "Oh, you're smart," commeuted th purchasing agent's wife. "Yes, that's my name," replltw th stenographer. And further the nfllant sayeth not. Which Wa3 It? Knlcker Au exalted personase or i;ot himself. ' Hocker Or else remembered himself. The Universal shipyard at Uouswn, Texas, has a woman oakum spinner who works nine hours every day. Thousands crF under nourished people have found theffc boc - a scierrbi-f ic blend of nour ishing cereals helps wonderfully in buildir hearth ana happiness Needs no k Sugar j