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About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 11, 1927)
at the Mme Jime require the least possible expenditure of . nervous energy la digesting qad absorbing ■that food. ip nnouncinrf. Cooking BnHy Turnips Turnips are fleshy rnqj plants of foods, are two very Important which grow in every temperate subjects in which every g L » 1 climate. In shape they may be should ha^> thorough training- long, round, or squatty. They are This subject should be tau g tt usually somewhat flattened ra boy« and girls alike— but aspect ther than long. The most delicately flavored tally girts, who are going to bo tbs menu-makers later on in the are found among the medium homes and upon whom the health White ones. The yellow turnips and welfare of the family depepf. or rutabagas are strangers and The lack of underaUndiag of are desired by some people. The food value of the turnip is foods— tbeix chemical composi tion— their\ speclhl relation - sod very low but the mineral content refletton on\tho human systesP' is good. causes more distress among peo * Usually we think of serving ple today than any other cause. turnips only in cooked form, but The wrong foods,-and the wrong if they are cut real fine, they are or poor combinations— unbalanc very delicious served raw in sal ed meals, day after day montl^af- ads. These dices may be served ter month, and year after year, alone with any desirable salad eventually cause one disease after dressing or they may be mixed with other vegetables. another to develop. The most common method of And. have you ever noticed .whenever a doctor Is called In to serving them is boiled with a piece day for moat any ailment the first of meat. They may be sliced, thing about which he Is concern cubed..or cooked whole. ed is the diet of the patient. To French fried turnip« are nice day numberless ails are being to ferve. They eiould oe prepar ed Just like French tried pota cured by diet alone. • A great many bf us go along, toes. year after year, eating (Whatever I f turnips are a hit strong they happens to be set before ns, may be made very delicately flav wltho'ut any regard as-to whether ored by mashing them and adding we are eating too. much starchy mashed potatoes to them. T h*e food, too much meat or protein amount of potatoes you add de fopd, too highly seasoned foods, pends upon the strength of the or drinking too.much tea or cof turnip and your own individual fee. | taste. The potatoes cause t h e .Occupation— habits and general turnips to be lighter and fluffier. manner of living, of courae, are Turnips are very* edible when of the utmost importance. la de sauted. Cut one-half inch slices. termining the kipd and amount Then dip these slices in season of foods eaten by the individual. ed beaten eggs to which has been era, and cleared aWay the last of < A man doing m aiual labor, one added two or three tablespoons the opposition In the sector. •"Throughout the day t**® con* who gets a great deal of exercise, of cold water. Roll this in fine, duet of Lance Corporal Amey In out In the fresh air, can naturally dried bread crumbs and t h e q the face of sneh opposition and take care of foods greater 4n saute in fat. danger was of the highest type, quantity more difficult to digest and rsener in quality, than a man and beyond ajl praise.** Up to and Including last Sun who sits all day long at » desk In And now? day, 17,959 cars had visited old W ell. W illiam Amey. tods/ a the office. Persons who do not have the Champoeg. The popularity of quiet man of « , his dark hair Just streaking with silver thread«, Opportunity of plenty of exercise that patriot'c shrine will Increase has hls-penclls sharpened and is and fresh air cannot be too care with the years.— Salem States back nt his old Job of tu rf as- ful of the kind and quality of man. countant, Just as If there had nev food they eat. They should have the most nutritions foods which READ TIDINGS CLASSIFIED er beau a war. crowd to p u t thmir hand* up no trace of the gunners. Bnt di- rectly ws saw something big and LONDON, Nov, 11. — I f yog dark look up in the fog. I though ware Introdnqlag W illiam Amey, it was a little fortress, but It. woe former lance corporal in the W ar only a French farmhouse. “There was no sign of life , and wickshire Infantry, to an Ameri can. the host way to do it would I barged in through the open door. The rooms were empty, be to say: “Thia mgn is the Sergeant'York bnt there was a stairway that led down to a' deep cellar. I shift of England.” Sergeant York, you will recall, ed my rifle, took a band grenade was selected as the greatest in an<( started to-tiptoe down that dividual hero of the A. E. F. Sim cellar stair. “ For a minute I was dasslsd by ilarly, W illiam Amery could eas the light. The Germans might ily he picked for a corresponding rank among England’s heroes. have been short on food but there And Armistice Day is an excel certainly was no candle shortage. In one corner of the cellar there lent time to toll shout him. were 50 Germans, and it seemed Hard Prise to W in Amey, to begin with, holds one like everyone of them had lit a of the most highly-prised decora candle Near the stars huddled the tions in the world— the Victoria French family— two old man, two Cross. The V. O„ granted only old womep and some kids. for deeds of the highest keroisAt , “ I raised m / hand grenade and usually goes to a m an,after his told that German crowd to pat I death, for. the simple reason that their-hands np and knap them up. a dead that merits the honor us They did. Captured Whole Croird ually ends fatally for the doer. “ One of the old woqien was so An officer has to recommend the hero for the V. C., the colonel of glad to see ms »he kissed me, the regiment, the brigadier gener and o y of the old men stlppod ms al and various lieutenants and a glass of ¿ognac. I told him la, major generals have to approve my best French— which isn't the recommendation, and finally mneb— to go upstairs and sail my the king himself mnst pash on it. pals. Then I told those Germans ’ But Amey got pae— sad Is alive Fwas going up sad that they were to follow me in single file every today to tell about it. Amey joined up in 1 *1 *. at the man with his hands up. Every age of SB, from Leamington. His many was. to leave arms of every army career was without any un kind down In that cellar. I said usual Incidents until the «closing that the first man that disobeyed fortnight of the war, when the me wotild he shot dead. “They came up, the whole SO. ISth British army corps was en gaged in the last “ big push” in By that time soma of the soldiers the vicinity of the St. Quentin of my section had been summoned canal, near the spot where Quen by the old Frenchman and we bagged the whole lo t.. tin Roosevelt lost his Ilfs. “I suppose I owe day life to a ' A t 5 :SO on a chilly, foggy finks. Those enemy soldiers prob- ■ morning Amey’s battalion went ably thought the farmhouse was over the top, with the village of surrounded by our men and if , Landrecies to Its objective. "The whole country, was wrap they tried anything on mo they’d , ped in a thick blanket of fog,“ be killed like rats in a hols by i says Amey. Part of onr outfit hand grenades. Lucky they did 1 went forward so fast that it failed not know I only had one man I • 1 to mop up, and our men were with me.” z - That’s Amsy.’s story. Bnt he : falling victims to machine gan nests that had been left undie- didn’t tali the whole of it. The j tnrhed. It was easy to gat lost colonel in command of tin <pgl- , or separated In that fog. Direct meat finished the tale in an or- ] ly, I fonnd myself accompanied der of the day. post'd up foV all i I by only one man-, stumbling along the regiment to see: “ Later, slngtadmndsd, ha gl- | through a muddy field. "On one aide of the road was * tacked a hostile machine gun post thick, high, tough hedge. Judg situated in another farm house. ' ing by the lights we saw In the Exposed to a heavy fire hq gd- ! vasced unhesitatingly, killed two J fog ws concluded that German gun fire was coming from that direc of tks garrison and drove he re- , malndsr into a cellar until help , tion . " ‘Come on,* I M id to my pal. arrived. ‘We’re going to see what’s on the “Again, later and unaided, ho. other side of that hedge.* attacked a chateau In Faubourg Seven Machine Guns "So we basted through, at the 8overs, whfch had been strongly cost of some scratches. Crikey! held and was holding np our ffne There behind that hedge were of advance. W ith determination seven machine guns, sticking And -disregard of personal mtaty their snouts through the hedge he rushed the chateau, killing two while the Germans, safe f t n d Germans and holding the remain sound, were peppering onr man. der uadi reinforced. This gallant I took my rifle dad shot down one action was Instrumental ta tha t crew. The others m w ns, hot capturing of a further I t prisen- ; "BY MILTON BBONNRR NBA. Service Writer they couldn’t pull their machine guns ont of the hedge And turn them on ns, and they didn’t have time to pall th rir service reyolv- era. They Jnst ran for it and dis appeared in the fog. ’Como o n / I Mid to my pal. ‘we’re going after them.* “You know, when your blood Is up you don’t think about danger or the odds against yon or say- thlitk of that sort. Yon Jnst klep going. Well, wo wont. Ws m w the Buick Antu cordially invite you to attend a special showing o f m o tor eftr fashions fo r 192 8 — / ■ * — in tro d u c in g lustrous colors o f la s tin g D u c o . ..ric h upholsteries o f d ie finest quality • . . smart new appointments. T h e Buick A u tu m n D isplay opens Satur day and w ill continue thro u g h the week D o n ’t miss this interesting exhibit. N O V E M B E R 12 to IS Medford-Auto Co. «0 N. Kivenld. W H E N -B B T T B R a digestive enxymo' cslled bromelin which acts powerfully on protein foods. Each one of us ha) in our saliva, onr* gastric and intestinal JuitM various enzymes or chemical snhstancM which specialize in the breaking down bf /starch into sngara, o f fa t into acids and glycer ine, and o f meat and other proteins into their simplest forms. These processes enable the body to use the food for energy and the build- in* «f bona and muscle. Therefore the wisdom of using pineapple to aseompany nmat becomes appar ent, although*]Its delicious supple mentary flavor 1e reason enough. Pmeopplt Pancakes with Sous- affesz S ift together tw o eupo of flour, one-half teaspoon o f salt and four teaspoons o f hairing powder. Add o n s b q a b n egg mixed with A U T O M O B IL E S AR B B U I L T , B U I C K WILL BV ILB The Printed Word DIGESTIBLE FAUL FOODS ’ Medford, On. one c i» of Hawaiian pineapple syrup from can, and one cop of cream, or evaporated m ilk, and stir until mixture thickens. Bea son with salt, paprika a n d a llttta cayenne. Add one can of snrimpa or one and ons-kalf caps of frosh shrimp, boiled, and one cap of shryddsd moist ooeoazrat. Dip six sltrss of pineapple fat floor sad santd in hot fat. Serve the pine- NVÎcnÔNæ CARR A T A M O D E R A T E C O ST T h e fo rc e o f p r in tin g lie s in th e ap p earan ce o f a*p rin ted ✓ a r tic le — fo r b y th e a p p e a r a n c e o f a letter h e a d o r b o o k le t y o u r p r o sp e c tiv e c u sto m e r ju d g e s y o u an d y o n cJ iu sin eM . wen la this dish. I t is th erefo re v e r y im p o r ta n t th a t y o u r p r in tin g h e o f BaMtJ Hom with HoBaUatt Pint applet Cover • two insh riles su ch a good q u a lity a s to m a k e a fa v o ra b le im p ressio n s f ham with cold water sad bring slowly to s boll. Cook for thirty minutes. Drain off the water end place ham In a shallow baking dkh. Cover with a hop of «rushed "pineapple, sprinkle with a mixture of qns-fonrth ran of brown sugar, one-fourth sup of dry bread «rumba and a dash of ground «lores. Bake one hear to a moderate oven, end serve with the remainder of the No. ■ can of piaeepplot. Pfegofrfr S tif f 'd M upon y o u r cu stom er—w h ic h u ltim a te ly b rin g s .b u s in e s s retu rn s. F o r m a n y y e a r s w e h a v e been p r in te r s fo r le a d in g b u sin e ss e sta b lish m e n ts in A sh la n d . - 4 W B CAN* D O E F F E C T I V E P R IN T IN G F O R Y O U A T A M O ST M O D E R A T E C O ST . ' . C htpii Brews out chops, out one snd one- half M b s t t H . M ’♦ » W l* m ow and elit m eet«» toe bone as if cutting i s two, eafl AH toe esvtty with the following mixture. To PhOadelphia , Pineapple*. Cut ; The Grants Pam Courier thinks i that mining should be made an i > ail-year activity. A lot o f poor devils w ill tdstlfy that there is .seasonal lim it ou gold-digging Bow.— Eugene Register. 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