SOLDIERS WELL FED Liberal Ration Allotted Germany's! Fighting Men. I Commandert Realize the Importance of Keeping Troopi In Proper Phys leal Condition Enormous Cost of the Commissariat Military experts placed little faltb In the numerous rumors during the first days of the war to the effect that the German armies were suffering for lack of food. The reason why they doubted these reports was because It was hard to believe that a commis sary department bo well equipped aa Germany's would fall In Us work sa sarly In a struggle for which prepara tions have been going on for years. - All civilized nations have long rec- A Huge Tuber 33 Feet Higher Than the Statue of Liberty and Weighing1 Over 120,000,000 Pounds Would Make Only a Week's Supply of Po tatoes for the Kaiser's Fighting Men. ognized that food supplies may play as Important a part In the winning or losing of battles as ammunition, marksmanship and personal bravery. With the thoroughness which is so characteristic of their nation the Ger mans have for years made the feeding of their soldiers a matter of scientific study. Their commissary department Is under the direction of a group of dietetic specialists who are admitted to have no superiors and few equals. The dally ration which they have prescribed as the best fortification for a German fighting man's stomach In cludes 26 ounces of fresh bread, or 17 ounces of biscuit; 13 ounces of fresh meat, or seven ounces of smoked meat; four ounces of rice, or eight ounces of flour, or 52 ounces of potatoes; nearly an ounce of salt; nearly an ounce of roasted coffee, or one-tenth of an ounce of tea, and hall an ounce of sugar. The amount of brpad eaten in a week by the Gorman soldiers now in the fluid would make a loaf 393 feet lllh and weighing GO, 1110,000 pounds. A week's supply of potatoes would make a tuber 1S8 feet high and weigh ing 120.30,000 pounds. The figures given aro for the stand nrd ration, which 1b probably a very different thing from that actually be ing consumed along the great battle formation, where there Is a great flexi bility as to the food to be used. It Is possible that pemmlcan (a con densed meat product) Is entering Into the ration very largely. The kaiser has always expressed a lively Interest In his soldlors' food, and he has not Infrequently ridden up to the field bakeries and sampled the product ol their ovens. Some Idea of the enormous expense of the war will be gained from the fact that the dally cost of provisions for the combined armies would be $12,500,000, without the expense of transportation, which would be $4, 200,000 more each day. These figures were based on the prices of some years ago, so that IB per cent could bo added to the cost of the food, making the cost today $18,750,000, or $22,950, 000 "delivered" at the place of con sumption. Why They Come Back. The war correspondent had returned from the scene of conflict. His amaz ingly reallstio descriptions had en jhalnetl countless readers. You could smell the stale powder 11 them; you could hear the dull booming of the mighty guns. "Those stories were wonderful," an idmirer told him. "Think so?" "Yes, Indeed. Why, I was with you In the trenches. I was cold, hungry, lulf-frozen and half-drowned. And when :hey had you up against the wall and :en muskets leveled at your heart I ilmost shrieked In terror. My dear uy, you mustn't be so natural." The returned one grimaced. "Cut It out," he growled. "The Jitng never happened." "You wasn't arrested for a spy?" "No, I wasn't I couldn't Get near inough to be arrested. And I wasn't n the trenches, either." "Not In the trenches." "No. I didn't even know where they rere." "B-but why did you come home?" "My Imagination gave out," he called tack as he strode away. Cleveland flata Dealer. I jij ) ,: 'it I ill SOUPS THAT WILL BE LIKED For the Colder Days There Is Noth ing Better Than That Made With Peas Other Suggestions. To make thick pea soup wash and soak overnight one pint of spilt peas. Next morning put them Into a pot with two quarts of water. Meantime Try until brown two sliced onions and i head of celery In two ounces of ;larlfled dripping. Put them In with the peas and two slices of bread cut ilagonally, a teaspoonful of salt and half that amount of pepper. Bring to the boil, simmer for one and a half hours, rub through a sieve, add me pound of mashed potatoes, return !t all to the pot and bring once more ust to the boiling point. Strain If : ieslred. If the soup is not thick j enough add a tablespoonful each of ! Hour and butter rubbed together and let the soup heat for five minutes ionger. This soup Is very nutritious ind would take the place of meat. For a good cabbage soup remove the outer leaves from two small cab bages and cut Into shreds with half a nead of celery. Soak In boiling water for ten minutes, drain and cool in fresh boiling water for ten minutes. Once more drain and place in a pan with two pints of stock or water, one sunce of finely minced sweet herbs ind pepper and salt to taste. Then bring to a boil and simmer for fifteen r twenty minutes. Serve with grated :heese. Potato soup Is good and cheap, es pecially If made without meat, al though scraps of meat or gravy may be added If liked. Cut three medium ilzed potatoes into thin slices, add one small slice onion and a handful Df rice. Boil In water sufficient to sover. Parsley heightens the flavor, but It should be lifted out when well cooked. When the potatoes are done blend a piece of butter the size of an egg with browned flour and stir It Into the soup. This gives a rich color and appetizing flavor. Milk may be added, but It should be sparingly used. You may add carrots, beans, peas and other left-over vegetables to uuch soup. Drop dumplings are nice to serve with this soup. Take one egg, one-half eggshell of water, a pinch of salt and one teaspoonful of baking powder. Add enough flour to make a dough that will drop easily from a teaspoon. Remove when they rise to the top of the soup. REALLY FIRST-CLASS SOUP Ingredients and Directions for Making Vegetable Puree, Liked by Everybody. Any vegetable puree can be pre pared as follows: Melt one ounce of well clarified dripping In a pan and cook in It till tender, but without coloring,-four ounces of onions, two ounces of celery and a bunch of herbs; then in five minutes lay in one pound of potatoes, carrots, turnips, etc., according to what you wish to use, peeled and cut up; cover down the pan and let It continue to cook for twelve to fifteen minutes longer, shaking the pan now and again to prevent the vegetables burning; then add a quart of liquid, with a few pep percorns and seasoning, and let it all simmer till tender (for about ono and a half hours), then rub it through the sieve, reheat, add a mixture of flour and milk and use. For the mix ture rub a little flour, say a dessert spoonful, Bmooth with some cold milk, water or stock, then a'dd this to the soup and let It all cook for five min utes longer. Pineapple Salad. Cut a ripe, mellow pineapple Into slices, pare each slice and remove the eyes. Sprinkle lightly with sugar and allow to stand a few hours to extract the juice. Drain and to the slices add one-hall as much grapefruit, tart apple or seeded Malaga grapes. Arrange on lettuce leaves. Dress with mayonnaise and decorate with halved grapes or candled cherries. Old-Fashioned Doughnuts. One egg well beaten, add two-thirds cupful of sugar, one-half cupful sour milk, one-half teaspoonful of soda dis solved In the milk, one-half teaspoon ful of salt, one-fourth teaspoonful dry ginger and nutmeg, one-half teaspoon ful cream of tartar sifted with the flour; try cupful and a half of flour, more If needed; roll out. These are delicious. Salad Oils. A decided salad oil economy Is ob tained by mixing with a quart of the pure cottonseed oil, a few ounces of pure olive oil for imparting richness of flavoring. The nutritive qualities of the two are about the same, and to some persons this mixture is more ap petizing than the rather pungent fla vor of the plain olive oil. How to Bind Soupt. If cream Boups and purees art. al lowed to stand, they separate unless bound together. To blud a soup melt butter, and when bubbling add an equal quantity of flour; when well mixed add to boiling soup, stirring well. Wrap Up Meat. A noted book advises after roasting a piece of meat that is to be served cold to wrap it In cheesecloth while It is still hot This will prevent it from drylug out and losing flavor. A Tea Hint If a lump of sugar Is put In the tea pot when making tea It will prevent lta spoiling the table cover It spilled. MAKE PERFECT JELLY CRABAPPLE8 CAN NOT BE TOO HIGHLY PRAISED. Excellent When Eaten as Jam or Served With Roast Mutton or Came Approved Method of Its Preparation. Crabapples make a most delicious Jelly which has' only to be tasted once to be proclaimed thoroughly delect able. The wild apples should be gath ered while firm and fresh, but not quite ripe enough to fall from the trees. Each one should be wiped with a damp cloth to cleanse it. They should then be weighed and put in a big preserving pan with one pint of water to every pound and a half of i fruit. Let them boll till quite tender, then strain through a colander, using a flat wooden spoon to pulp them through. When the liquid Is extract-; led measure it and to each pint allow three-quarters of a pound of sugar, j book juice and sugar together, boiling for 20 minutes. Remove the scum ' and pour the jelly Into small pots, i It Is very nice eaten by Itself as jam, but can be used for garnishing, as It Is of a pretty red color. It Is also ex cellent with roast mutton or game and makes a capital substitute for red currant Jelly. Crabapples in sirup is a very pretty dessert dish, and although the apples take some time to prepare they are worth doing, especially as they keep some time when bottled. The sirup must be made with two parts sugar to one of water, the in gredients being brought to the boil and allowed to cook gently till a fair ly strong thread can be made by dip ping the fingers in the sirup and pull ing a little. W'hen the sirup is ready drop In the crabapples and bring gen tly to the boil; remove the pan from the Are, skim off the scum, lift out the fruit, put into an earthenware pan and cover with the sirup. Let the fruit soak for 24 hours. Now drain oft the sirup, add a little more sugar and water and repeat the process. Do this at Intervals of 24 hours till the sirup turns to a pink jelly and the crabapples are saturated to the core with sugar. They must be handled very carefully so as not to break the skins. The crabapples can be used at once or bottled and used as re quired. Cranberry Jelly Is almost indispen sable with venison and lends piquancy to mutton, too. , The cranberries should be well washed and the dark colored berries picked out, as these spoil the color of the jelly. The fol lowing Is a popular recipe: Boll a pint of water and a pound and a half of berries together for ten minutes, then rub through a colander. Return to the preserving pan, add three-quarters of a pound of sugar and boll for five minutes; pot down. Elderberry Chutney. When elderberries are ripe enough to gather a very delectable chutney can be made as follows; ' Ingredients One pound of elderber ries, three ounces of raisins, half a pint of vinegar, a teaspoonful of salt, six cloves, a little cayenne and mace (just a dust of each), one onion, two ounces of sugar and one-quarter of an ounce of ground ginger. Method Run the berries through a sieve, then pound together the onion and the rest of the ingredients, having stoned the raisins first. Put all to gether In an enameled saucepan and boll for eight minutes. Take the pan off fire, put the lid on and leave till the contents are cold. When cold store in jars and tie down with parch ment. Canned Salad for Winter Use. Clean and cut In dice carrots and beets. Leave small pearl onions' whole. Cut celery in strips. Cook carrots, onions and celery in salted water until tender, cook the beets separately until tender. Place in lay ers In Jars, fill with the water cooked In, seal well. This makes an attrac tive garnish for fish, chops and steaks In the winter, also an excellent com bination salad mixed with a little French dressing. It is ready at a minute's notice, therefore nice for emergencies. Beef Roll. Pass two pounds lean beef through meat chopper, add one tablespoonful finely chopped parsley, one teaspoon ful salt, one teaspoonful onion juice, one-quarter teaspoonful mace, one quarter teaspoonful pepper, one egg well beaten and one-third cup soft bread crumbs soaked in cold water and wrung dry. Mix thoroughly and shape into a roll. Place on pieces of salt pork in a baking pan, bake about thirty minutes In hot oven, bast 'ng often. Worth Knowing. When broiling Bteak, brush with olive oil. It will keep In the Juice. Always flour your pie tins Instead of greasing them. You won't have soft pies, says the Janesville Gazette. Soup quickly goes sour In the warm days, but It will keep sweet if a pinch of carbonate of soda is added to every ijuart Makes Glassware Shine. To keep clear and clean the a-lasi decanter and carafe as well as the wa ter pucner mere is nothing so effec tive aa lemon juice. Cut up the rlnde left after making lemonade, add warm water and place In decanter. After a lew hours rinse thoroughly. OBI ill ibum OSTEND, as a place for tempor ary occupancy, is the , best place the Germans have cap tured, writes E. N. Vallandlg ham in the Philadelphia Rec ord, for Its accommodations for tran sients are, or were, out of all propor tion to its size and normal population. If there is ever a time when Ostend has . no visitors Its population then numbers something under 50,000. Dur ing the long season of its summer and autumn vogue, which extends from the first of June nearly to the end of October, there are far more transient than permanent inhabitants. It Is a favorite place for Londoners on vaca tion, but Ostend also shelters conti nentals of all ranks. The place Is by no means what the awed admirer of his betters calls "ex clusive," yet It is utterly unlike any American watering place, popular or otherwise, and it is In acute contrast with that marvelous resort of the Dutch Scheveningen, where the ser ried thousands of hooded wicker beach chairs make the foreshore like a vast apiary. Ostend lies in West FlanderB, 14 miles from that medieval Bleepiilg beauty, Bruges, the most remarkable survival of older western Europe. A steam, railway, a trolley line and a canal connect Bruges with Ostend. To go by canal in one of those slow little power-driven craft that traverse the Belgian Interior waterways is to enjoy a charming experience, for the land is rich in varied interest, now occupied by market gardens, now by the villas . - . ' W-T x-k' a f" if' j THP URDMElNAniL." OF OSTF.NQ of well-to-do Flemings set amid a riot of bloom and amply shaded with trees and shrubbery. Backward the eye takes in the stately towers and spires of antique Bruges silhouetted in soft, air-drawn lines against the tender sky of Flanders. Old and New Ostend. There is old Ostend and new, the old with beautiful churches, quaint winding streets, surviving bits as pic turesque as parts of Bruges itself. An ample railway station, and many wide and comparatively new streets give even the older part of Ostend a mod ern touch, and the shore seems wholly modern. Glittering new villas, big and little, salute the eye before one reaches the Ostend of the Londoner's delight, of the cosmopolitan throng, of gay ety, naughtiness and wild extrava gance. Take some great American sea side resort, transform its huge wooden hotels into sturdy permanent struc tures of brick and stone, its board walk into asphalted ways buttressed with a granite sea wall, clear it of merry-go-rounds and every like catch penny device of the garish and noisy kind, and you have Ostend of the sea front. An ample foreshore lined with those ridiculous bathing machines that Eu rope cannot outgrow is spread out be fore the eyes of the lounger on the granite-buttressed bluffs above. Thou sands walk or sit on the upper level to watch the sea and the bathers. You pay a penny for a chair, whence the North sea glooms beneath your eyes toward England, On bright days It is a delicious expanse of gray-green wa ters breakinc here and there into whitecaps beneath a low, soft, friend ly sky. On dull days it is a eullen welter of angry salt water, with murky skeins of smoke in the offing from steamships passing up and down the coast. On the Bathing Beach. Ostend has a summer repute for gayety, and daring display at the bath ing beach. As a matter of fact, the costumes would hardly shock one hardened to the things that a com- plalsant police tolerate at a hundred American seaside resorts. The squeam ish dress with care . in the odd little houses on wheels with gay curtains jealously drawn as the lady fully clad steps in. After sufficient time for change of costume has been allowed, the fat Flemish horse, under the guid ance of a fat Flemish female compan ion of the bath, draws the bathing machine into the water, and hi due eeasou the fair bather steps Into the embrace of the North sea without scandal. When her bath Is finished the hut on wheels again receives her, the fat horse laboriously draws her up to the dry sands, the lady dressea at leisure and emerges in street cos tume. Nothing could be more seemly, modest or droll. Elsewhere along the beach one catches sight of sirens in scant, close-clinging, gaudy costumes that reveal every line of the figure as they disport themselves along with their male escorts, but even for these freer ladles the discreet bathing ma chine awaits, and the curious pry m vain at its uncommunicative wooden sides. Huge and luxurious hotels, rich wine cellars and a truly magnificent gambling house, the Kursaal, are at the service of the Invading Germans. When Ostend Is in its normal summer and autumn condition the Kursaal is the seat of all its gayety. Here are a gorgeous assembly room of huge size, a theater with large seating capacity, private dining rooms, private play rooms, broad awninged piazzas for dining with the sea beneath one's eyes, all the solid and liquid luxuries that folk with money to Bpend enjoy, Besieged Many Times. ' Ostend has stood many a siege, the most notable that of a little more than three centuries ago, when the place yielded to the Spaniards after a resistance of three years. The city has a fine harbor with several basins and a narrow entrance artificially created. Its normal traffic with Lon don Is Immense, but for the time be ing the intimate relations of the two cities are suspended, doubtless to the relief of the great seaport. Nearly two centuries ago the Ostend East India company was organized by the Emperor Charles VI. of Germnnv who as ruler of Austria also ruled the Spanish Netherlands. This company was Intended to secure for Ostend share In the East Indian trade, and to make the city a great commercial port England and Holland, however. Jealous of their oriental trade, made protest, and in 1731 the emperor, after having suspended the operations of his company for seven years, definitely abandoned his scheme. Since that time Ostend has been mostly one Europe's play places. In the political history of the United States, Ostend has a curious share. When In 1854 James Buchanan, John Y. Mason and Pierre Soule were our ministers respectively to Great Britain: France and Spain, the three met m the charming Belgian waterine nlarp and after consultation, prepared what is known as the "Ostend Manifesto which was a state paper, urging the purchase of Cuba from SDain bv the United States, and the seizure of the island If Spain should refuse to sell The meeting of the ministers had been undertaken at the order of President Pierce, but the great European pow ers hinted that they would not tolerate the proposed aggression unon Snal and no political party in the United States approved the manifesto, while the secretary of atate was unsympa thetio. Perhaps the "Ostend Fiasco' would be a better phrase to St this vain attempt i in )- TAKE TIME HIS EXCUSE FOR BEING LATE One of Harry Stevens' Walters Made "Suoreme Kino." the Nlflht He Was Initiated Into Lodge. Down in New York they are calling Harry StevenB, the gentle, manry and urbane Delmonico of the polo grounds, "Supreme King" Stevens, and this Is why: Harry employs about four hundred waiters and vendors to serve the crowds during games, and he Is a stickler on promptitude. One day one of his skilled lieutenants, who wields the razor and shaves ham for the sandwiches, reported late and Harry caught him. "Why are you late?" demanded Harry. "You see, Mr. Stevens, sah, I was Initiated into the lodge last night and Ah was up so late, Ah overslept." "No excuse," snorted Harry. "Ini tiation doesn't last all night" , "But, sah, aftah Ah was Initiated Ah was Inducted Into office." "Inducted Into office the first night?" demanded Harry. "What of fice?" "Ah was Inducted into the office of supreme king." "Supreme king the first night you Join the lodge!" exclaimed Harry. "Yes, sah. Yo see, dat am de lowest office we hab." A Painful Reminder. "I must tell you about the strange conduct of Wasserby." "What did he do?" "We passed a church on our way to town this morning. When he sow it he shuddered and turned pale." "What church was it?" "The Bristol Memorial Methodist, South." "Ah! That is the church he was married In." Sarcasm. "You'll simply have to take what we ve got," she said to the man her husband had unexpectedly brought to dinner. ' That's all right," said the guest. "Ever Blnce we've been married I've been trying to convince Jim that this is Just our home, not a delicatessen store." ' Cautioned. "Hey!" shouted the sheriff, "don't you know you're exceeding the speed limit?" "How do you know?" " 'Cause you're ridln' an' I'm walkin'. Any automobile that passes a sheriff who wants a lift to the next town in goin' rather reckless." Some Use. Bacon A "knocker" isn't much use In this world. , , Egbert Oh, yes he Is. This paper says that each woodpecker In the United States Is worth $20 In ranh. when the value is estimated on the value of the good that it does to the trees. ABSURD. "Did that guy you braced fall for your hard-luck story?" "Naw. He said I was trying to work him." "H'm. How foolish to suspect youse of working." Time's Remorseless Molar. "I thought," said the indignant anJ swerer of an advertisement, as he looked about an empty room, "that this was advertised as a 'going con cern." ' "It sure Was." said the lanttor an ha iwrung his mop. "but that was hut wees, it s gone now." The Arrival. "I vould have you understand," said the actor who was talking of salary for next season, "that I have arrived." ! "1 guess that's right," answered the manager, who was once a railroad con Juctor; "and, having arrived, hero la where you get off." m I T i