Newspaper Page Text
SEORGII TROOPS
OFF FOO BORDER
first Battalion Os State’s Soldiers, After
Months In Camp, Ordered
To Mexico
EXTENSION OFSTATE ROAD
Offers Made By Brunswick And Sa
vannah—One Road Files
a Protest
♦♦♦++♦+♦♦+♦♦+♦+
♦ *
O Atlanta — ♦
♦ The Georgia troops have +
♦ been ordered to the Mexican +
♦ border by the war department. +
♦ The troops affected by the de- ♦
♦ partment orders are the first +
♦ battalion of field artillery, com- ♦
♦ posed of the Chatham artille- +
♦ ry, batteries A and S, of Sa- ♦
♦ vannah, and the Atlanta artil- +
♦ lery, battery B, of Atlanta. +
♦ The department ordered ten +
* thousand additional coast artil- ♦
♦ lerymen, infantrymen, caval- ♦
♦ rymen and engineers of the +
♦ National Guard from all parts +
♦ of the United States to the +
♦ Mexican border immediately. A +
♦ similar number of militia in- ♦
♦ fantrymen now on the border +
♦ will be released from service +
♦ upon the arrival of the new +
* troops. 4
♦ +
♦♦♦+♦++♦+++♦♦♦♦
Will Lease State Road
Atlanta—
Forms of advertisements for bids
looking to the re-lease of the Western
and Atlantic railroad, extended or not
as the case may be, were adopted by
the W. & A. commission in executive
session. They will be drafted in form
for insertion in the newspapers by
Chairman C. Murphey Candler:
The bids will be for thirty years
from December 27, 1919, the date of
the expiration of the present lease,
and also for a term ending October 12,
1966. The latter date was selected,
as it is the date when the present
lease of the Cincinnati Southern ex
pires, and it was thought that it might
prove advantageous to the state to
have the lease of its road expire on
the same date as it might be found
most profitable for the same lessee to
secure the whole road running from
Cincinnati south.
The bids will be advertised as soon
as the forms are got in shape. All bids
must be submitted to the commission
by December 5, 1916, at noon of that
date. Each bid must be accompanied
by a certified check for $25,000 as an
evidence of the good faith of the bid
der and his ability to carry out any
contract with the state that may be
made.
As has already been published, the
bids will cover four positions, to-wit:
The lease of the road as it stands.
Extension of the road to the sea.
The lease of the whole road as ex
tended.
The sale of existing roads to the
state should any road desire to sell.
Bidders will be invited to submit
bids covering any one or all four of
these propositions as the case may be.
Committees from Savannah and
from Brunswick appeared before the
commission at its session to urge the
extension of the road to the sea,
and To present the advantages
of their respective cities as port termi
nals should extension be decided upon.
Feldspar And Pyrite Mined
Atlanta—
Dr. S. W. McCallle, state geologist,
in a report submitted to the advisory
board of the state gelogical survey,
lays stress on the development in
Georgia in the past four months of
the feldspar and pyrites mines, indi
cating that there is a considerable fu
ture for these minerals in this state.
Doctor McCallie’s report to the ad
visory board of the state geological
survey is as follows:
"During the quarter my time wks
largely taken up tn general routine of
fice duty. However, I found time to
make a few field trips, investigating
the gold, the pyrites and feldspar in
dustries of the state. In each of these
linee of develoument I found marked
activity, especially in the pyrites and
feldspar developments. The high price,
of pyrites, a mineral used in the manu-'
facture of sulphuric acid, accounts
largely for the activity along this line.
To render all the aid possible in this
development the survey is now mak
ing a more or less exhaustive study
of all the pyrites prospects and mines
in the state. This work, which is un
der the immediate charge of Mr. J. E.
Brantly, assistant geologist, is now
well under way, and before the field
season is closed much of the area of
/ the state which is known to have
these deposits will be covered.
Fortune of $50,000 For State
The remains of a $50,000 ante-bellum
fortune will be contributed by "Uncle
JegT Stevens of Heard county to the
state as a relic of the Civil war.
At the beginning of the war, Mr.
Stevens advanced the Confederate gov
ernment $50,000 and later he was re
paid in Confederate money, which
•ractically became worthless. Many
years afterwards he made a fire
■creen of the bills, and this he will
•resent to the state, putting it on ex-
MUtion in the museiun at the capl-
,FEDERAL PRISON ANNEX
TO COST TWO MILLION
Will Not Be Completed Till Fall Os
1918—Largest In The
United States
I
Atlanta—
It was stated here that two addi
tional years will be required to finish
the annex of the federal prison, and
that the sum total of the construc
tion will exceed two million dollars.
The annex will make the Atlanta
penitentiary the largest in America.
At present Fort Leavenworth, in Kan
sas, is the largest prison.
The building is being constructed
with prison labor, and has been under
way since 1908. The western wing is
almost complete, the structure having
been finished for several months, and
now awaiting only the installation of
the steel fixtures.
The annex will consist of two cell
houses, with a capacity of approxi
mately 800 prisoners. This will permit
a prison population of almost two
thousand in all. Between eight hun
dred and one thousand are already
housed in the immense plant.
Information Bureau Proposed
Atlanta —
Alderman-elect Johnston, from the
Fourth ward, will, as soon as his term
of office begins the first of next year,
introduce an ordinance creating a bu
reau of information at the city hall.
Mr. Johnston says that his experi
ence in the city council for four years
has shown him that the public inter
ests demand that there be an office at
the city hall where all information
about public expenses can be furnish
ed the tax payers.
“I believe that the municipal gov
ernment,” states the alderman-elect,
"owes it to the people of the city to
see that they are furnished by some
competent authority with all themeces
sary Information wanted at the city
hall. It has been my experience that
numbers of people call at the city hall
daily who are put to great inconven
iente and made to lose valuable time
trying to secure information about pub
lic matters. They are sent from pillar
to post about matters before they can
find out where and to whom they
should go.”
Uncle Sam Will Find Jobs For Men
Atlanta—
Soldiers honorably discharged from
the United States army no longer face
the “out of a job” bugabear.
The war department is taking steps
to provide such men with jobs, and in
accordance with this policy, a guide
to civil employment for ex-soldiers,
has been sent to the local army re
cruiting station.
The pamphlet was issued for the
purpose of improving the army by at
tracting to it the best class of Ameri
can youth who wish to acquire a voca
tional training which army life now
gives them. It contains valuable in
formation for enlisted men to show
them how it goes about getting a job
after their terms expire.
Copies of the pamphlet will be plac
ed in all permanent mess and soldiers’
reading rooms, and a copy will be giv
en every man leaving the service
whose character is not less than
“good.”
Minnesotans Come For Unveiling
Atlanta—
Georgia was host to Gov. J. A. A.
Burnquist of Minnesota and a party
of state officials when a monument
erected to the memory of the soldiers
of that state who were killed^ in the
Civil war is dedicated at the national
cemetery at Andersonville.
Accompanying Governor Burnquist
were members of the Minnesota state'
monumental commission and the adju
tant general. The members of the
commission are C. A. Andrews of St.
Paul, chairman; Thomas P. Wilson of
St. Paul; H. B. Dike of Minneapolis;
Levi Longfellow of Minneapolis, and
C. F. McDonald of St. Cl&id, secre
tary.
Conference On Cotton Mill Work
• Atlanta-
Some fifty leading Methodist minis
ters and laymen of the North Georgia
conference held a conference on cot
ton mill work in the Philathea hall of
the Wesley Memorial building.
This conference of church leaders is
expected to be of far-reaching influ
ence in Christian work, as it is plan
ned to adopt a definite and permanent
policy of church work among the cot
ton mill operatives of the state. Min
isters and laymen who have had ex
perience in this phase of church activ
ity will discuss various features
Building State Highways
Atlanta—
The machinery through which the
state of Georgia will be in position to
receive from the federal government
some two million dollars for the pur
pose of'constructing highways In this
state was perfected, when the state
highways department, created by the
last session of the general assembly,
was organized In the office of the state
prison commisssion, which body forms
the nucleus of the new department.
Host To Camp Harrie Shriners
Camp Harris —
Maj. J. D. Seamans, commander of
the Second squadron of cavalry, was
the host to about twenty-live Shriners
at a dinner at the camp. The affair
was one of the biggest events of the
social life of the present encampment
of Georgia Guardsmen.
All Shriners who are members of
the Georgia brigade now in camp
awaiting orders to moye to the bor
der and some flfteeii members of the
Alsihah temple of Macon, were pre»
•nt
TERRIFIC Dlill-
BY ANGLO-FRENCIf
Comble And Thiepval Have Been Stormed
By The Allies On The Somme
River Front
STORES OF MUNITIONS TAKEN
Success Most Important Won By Al
lies Since They Began Grand
Offensive
London. —Combles, the pivotal point
in the German line guarding the ap
proach of Bapaume, on the north, and
Peronne, on the south, of the Somme,
has fajlen before the terrific attacks
of the French and British, the Ger
mans fighting to the death or surren
dering when there was no longer hope.
French and British troops swept in
from three sides after their capture
of Morval and Fregicourt, broke
through the German defense, overran
the town and carried all before them.
This place, with its marvelous subter
ranean passages and powerful fortifi
cations, had been caught in the grip
of the entente allies, who, coming
from the north and the south, had al
ready advanced far beyond it and cut
off communication with the rear ex
cept a narrow strip, which was cover
ed by the allied guns.
At the end of the fighting the town
was filled with the bodies of Germans
who had fallen fighting, the French of
ficial statement says.
Prior to the loss of Combles, the ef
fect of the victories of the French and
British armies, in the capture of im
portant strategic . points on the previ
ous day, was reflected in the official
communication issued by the German
war office, which, after describing
briefly the great artillery bombard
ment of the entente allies, lasting four
days and the attack between the An
cre and the Somme, admits that “the
conquest of the villages on the line
of Gueudecourt must be recognized,”
and adds, “but before all we must
think of our heroic troops, who faced
the united Anglo-French principal
forces and the massed employment
of material of the whole world’s war
industry, prepared during many
months.”
Both Thiepval at the northwest end
of the British line and the fortified
town of Gueudecourt, northwest of
Les Boeufs, have fallen
BOMBS RAINED ON
‘BUCHAREST; MANY KILLED
Two-Thirds Os Victims Os Aeroplanes
Os The Teutonic Allies Were
Women And Children
Bucharest. —Sixty persons were
killed and a large number wounded
in Bucharest by bombs dropped from
a squadron of aeroplanes of the Teu
tonic allies, and five others were kill
ed later by bombs dropped on the city
from a Zeppelin, according to an offi
cial communication issued here. Two
thirds of the victims are declared to
have been women and children.
The statement says:
“A squadron of enemy aviators drop
ped bombs on Bucharest yesterday af
ternoon. No military building was
hit, but sixty persons were killed and
a large number wounded by bombs
falling on a sanitarium and an or
phanage. Twq-thirds of the victims
, were women and children.
“On the night of the 25th a Zeppe
lin dropped bombs on Bucharest, kill
ing five children. Our aircraft have
bombed camps in Transylvania.”
36 Killed In Zeppelin Raid
London. —Thirty-six persons were
^killed in a Zeppelin raid, it was an
nounced officially. The announcement
follows: "Seven airships raided Eing
land last night, and in the early hours
of this morning. The districts attack
ed were the south coast, the east coast,
the northeast coast and the north mid
lands. The principal attacks were
aimed against the industrial centers in
the last mentioned area.”
German* Release Detained American
Washington.—Consul General Skin
ner at London cabled the state depart
ment that Isador Polak, the American
citizen taken off the Dutch steamer
Prinz Hendrik, when the vessel was
carried into Zeebrugge by a German
warship, had been released and now
was at Amsterdam.
Villa Men Killed In Great Batches
El Paso, Texas. —Wholesale execu
tions are taking place in Chihuahua
City following the Villa attack, it was
announced at military headquarters
here. Five hundred Villa adherents
have been executed since the fight,
the report to Gen. George Bell, Jr.,
states, and many others have been im
prisoned. General Bell also has a re
port of a skirmish at Argpa, ten miles
south of Juarez. He says wounded
Carranza soldiers have been, brought
back to Juarez from that station, prob
ably from Chihuahua City.
Two British Officer* Held On Icland
New York.—Maj. Arthur S. Hum
phrefs and Lieutenant Hugh Levlck,
Jr., British army officer!?, detained at
Ellis island under a recent order from
Washington to the immigration author
ities to hold soldiers of belligerent
countries attempting to enter the Unit
ed States, were taken before a spe
cial board of inquiry here. In addition
to the inquiries ordinarily addressed
to immigrants, the officers were asked
questions to establish that they are
itfil members of the British army and
as to their' destination. -
WWM9WTZW. »r ne nnunmt smttcm
ENVIOUS FRIENDS.
They name thee before me, a knell to
mine ear.
A shuddering comes o’er me. Why wert
thou so dear?
They know not I knew thee, who knew
thee too well;
Long, long shall I jue thee too deeply to
tell.
To have loyal friends, steadfast and
sincere, is a blessing given to but few.
In the sunshine of
I youth, wealth,
prosperity and
popularity, how
they crowd about
the favorites of
fortune, each vie
ing with the other
to be the one
I nearest and dear
i est.
| The warmheart
ed woman takes
her so-called
friends to her bos
om, trusts and be
lieves in them,
knowing not the
false from the
true. The - loyal
friends will tell
her her faults if they notice any. The
insincere ones will gloss them over and
secretly rejoice in seeing her make
mistakes which in the end may prove
fatal to her happiness, even her repu
tation.
If a young woman is extremely pop
ular with the opposite sex, she is sure
to create envy among the less prepos
sessing of her own sex. These girls
envy her, but consider it exceedingly
clever on their part to keep in close
companionship with her to be intro
duced to her young men friends and,
through her, get the opportunity of
meeting them often. They flatter the
popular girl, slyly, covertly putting her
on the wrong track whenever possible.
They are sweet to her face, but de
fame her in the bitterest sarcasm be
hind her back. They do their utmost
to influence her to choose hats and
costumes that are the most unbecom
ing to her and praise away of wear
ing her hair that changes her from a
pretty young woman into a freak.
They pooh-pooh her old mother's
wise counsel when they are alone with
her, pouring unwise suggestions in her
ear. They tell her It Is a pity that she,
the bright particular star of the ball,
should be obliged to go home at eleven
o’clock, which is just the edge of the
evening, to please the notion of an
old lady who has forgotten what it is
to be young and gay. The real reason
behind their urging her to remain un
til the ball breaks up is that many of
the most desirable young men leave
after the popular girl has gone home.
If she has two would-be lovers, one
a splendid business man of sterling
honor and reputation, the other a
trifling ne’er do well, with a good
looking face, her false, envious friends
will do their utmost in a subtle way
to influence her to choose the rake in
direct opposition of her happiness and
welfare.
Envious friends are a thousand times
worse than an avowed foe. One knows
what to expect from an enemy. The
envious friend strikes a treacherous
blow in the dark. A girl should have
as wide a circle of desirable acquain
tances as possible, but the friends she
clasps to her bosom she should be sure
of through long contact and experi
ence with them.
If poverty or disaster comes to a
woman, then she will soon be able to
sift the wheat of real friendship from
the chaff. When a girl makes the un
welcome discovery that certain wom
en are envious of her past all doubt
ing she should avoid them as much as
possible. Treat them with courtesy,
but shut all the approaches to her
heart against them. True friendship
is “the secret sympathy, the silver
link, the silken tie, which heart to
heart and mind to mind, in body and
in soul can bind.” “Envy writhes at
another’s joy and hates that excel
lence it cannot reach.”
DOES KISSING DENOTE LOVE?
On* kina from all others prevent* me,
And sets all my pulses astir.
And burns on my lips and torments me—
’Tls the kiss I fain would give her.
One kiss for all others requites me,
Although It Is never to be,
And sweetens my dreams and invites me—
'Tls the kiss that she dare not give me.
There's many a stern, elderly man
of business and practical woman, who
have no patience with sentiment, who
will wonder why I have given time
and space to an article bearing the
above caption. To such I would say,
let us look Into the matter and we
wH soon all agree there is a reason
and a grave need. Hundreds of letters
on every conceivable subject reach me
in the course of a week. Among these
are several hundreds from young girls
confiding to me their love affairs, in
genuously asking, |p one form or an
other, “Does kissing denote love?”
It is my duty to give these hundreds
of Innocent young girls earnest advice
upon a pleasure which may lead to fa
tal results if the girl is not forewarned
and forearmed.
I might write the most learned arti
cle my brain might be capable of con-
raving upon the urgent questions of
Hpe day, but I know in my own heart,
| r no matter how graciously and heartily
it might be received by those who ap
preciate articles of acknowledged sen
sibility and merit, it would not do a
hundredth part as much good as this
one article on kissing, which will, I
hope, sink down deep into the youth
ful, Innocent hearts near and afar by
the thousands.
It is not the girl carefully watched
over, guarded and chaperoned who has
, need to beware of the sweetest ex
pression of sentiment, but the young
girl who has no parents, no home, no
friends, no one in whom she can con
fide. It is the nature of the young to
be romantic, some to be more inclined
toward sentiment and influenced by it
than others. When her first lover
crosses her path, many such a young
girl is at a loss as to whether she
should give or deny the kisses her sui
tor pleads for.
It is these young girls to whom a
strict word, a sharp but kindly meant
rebuke in the nick of time, may pre
vent a youthful heart from knowing
life’s saddest lesson, a young life from
going astray.
While no hard and fast rule can be
laid down to offset a lover’s arguments,
girls should be made to realize that
there is no way by which a girl can
lose a young man's respect and her
own self-respect and maiden modesty
more quickly than to permit a man
who has not yet proposed marriage
the privilege of a kiss. A man may
pooh-pooh this statement as much as
he likes, but down deep in his heart
he knows it to be absolutely true.
DO DRESSES GET BEAUX?
We sacrifice to dress till household joys
And comforts cease. Dress drains our
cellars dry
And keeps our larder lean; puts out our
fires ~
And Introduces hunger, frost and woe
Where peace and hospitality might reign.
Girls, what do you think of this? I
have just received a round robin let
ter signed with the names of 20 young
men who write me. They have started
a secret club the object of which is:
"To call upon only the girls who are
as useful as ornamental; to manfully
aid In abolishing costly dressing among
girls; to invite out only the girl who
can voujh for the fact she makes her
own clothes; to ask our sweethearts
to wear dresses costing not more than
five dollars; to refrain from wearing
the frivolous white shoes of the day;
to urge our girl friends to bake bread
Instead of playing bridge; to trim
their own hats and those of their
mothers, their cousins and their
aunts; to stop the use of chalk on
their faces and rouge on their Ups; to
wear no jewelry excepting a betrothal
ring; to refrain from putting out their
best young man for party carriage
hire; to choose for a wife from among
the girls who like housework and
children; to frown upon gossip on a
girl’s lips, encouraging only truth; to
place a premium on virtue and girlish
modesty; to do the lovemaking, like
wise the marriage proposals, our
selves, etc.”
These young men do oot seem to ap
preciate the every-day girl of nowa
days—merry, good hearted, unwilling to
starve the poor dressmaker or millin
er out of existence, who adore dainty
white shoes and wear them to vie with
the pretty little actresses whom the
boys are wont to fall head and ears
In love with on the boards.
What would become of the baker—
wouldn’t he have to shut up shop apd
give over his trade to the lost arts if
the girls should, with one acclaim,
bake him out of his job? If the girls
ignored the old saying, "Let thy clothes
be as costly as thy purse can buy”—
or something to that effect—making
their gowns out of cheesecloth or pa
per muslin, wouldn’t they have to re
new their wardrobes every week and
look so freakish at that that no man
would think seriously of them after
the first glance? \
The aforesaid young men would find
it all sufficient in their platform to
stick to the resolution “To place a
premium (which I presume to be a
proposal of marriage) on virtue and
girlish modesty” and the home-loving
girl who is fairly prudent in the 'way
of money expenditures.
Night Lif*.
A farmer and his wife moved to the
city for a few weeks of metropolitan
life. They got what they went after.
They stopped with their son, whose
next door neighbor was a Bohemian
sort of fellow, and who frequently
gathered to his home after the theater,
some of the troupe and their friends,
who talked, ate, sang, laughed and
kept up a lively and cheery time till
early morning. The farming pair en
dured it for a while, and then packed
up their things and returned to their
rural home, where the wicked cease
from troubling and the weary are at
rest, and “where there ain’t no night
life,” which quoted clause contains the
whole purport of this incident. “No
night life.” There is a blessing in the
very idea. Night Is all right for study,
but there is too much of it for fun,
and when you find a people addicted to
this night life they are not sound and
solid enough to found a civilization
upon.—Ohio State Journal.
Not a Quoter.
“You never quote George Washing
ton in your speeches.''
“No,” replied Senator Sorghum.
“When a man has done as much for
his country as Washington did I don’t
think he ought to be dragged into ar
guments in which he has no chance to
reply. And, besides, I never ran across
any sayings of his that would influ
ence the appropriations my constitu
ents are looking fo F ”
PICKLES OF MB
PREPARATIONS THAT WILL
APPRECIATED BY ALL
Bert Method of Preparing Small f
for Future Consumption—How
Put Up Cucumber* and Caull
flower. . x
A reader of “Efficient Housekeei
asks for a “tested recipe for small
pickles.” All the recipes used in
department are tested, unless o
wise stated; sometimes an uni
formula is sent to us with the re<
that it be published, and it it s
practical we use it. But in such i
we always state that it Is a coni
tion.
To Pickle Small Beets—Choose
of uniform size, clean them am
to cook without bruising the
They should be tender In 40 mit
Place in cold water and the skins
jub off easily. Put the beets
large-mouthed jars and cover
scalding vinegar made as swe<
you like it and spiced. The
mixture should include cinm
cloves and allspice. These shou
whole and be tied in a muslit
and put In the vinegar while it 1
The vinegar should be pure cide
acetic vinegar, and if very s
should be weakened a little with
ing w'ater —very strong vinegar ।
the color from the beets.
Prudent housekeepers reckon
save at least 40 per cent frot
grocer’s budget by preparing the!
relishes, like pickles, chili sauce,
chow and stuffed mangoes. Thos
have their own kitchen gardens
more than this, so the incenti
make more and more pickles Is
No one is likely t 6 have too ma
If you have cucumber vines
garden, gather the pickles every
ing and place them in brine un
are filckled. Then drain and fi
them, first in cold then In bolllt
top When they are fresh enou;
them into jars or bottles and
with scalding vinegar that has
sweetened and spiced to suit
taste.
The pickles should be assort
cording to size, and some m®
packed in the jars with whole B
or peppers and without being ■
ened. If you enjoy mixed pick®
will like this recipe: , B
Scald in hot salt water two o®
heads of cauliflower, according H
amount of mixed pickles you in®
make. Also scald nasturtium B
smaU silver-skinned onions, I
green beans Ad tiny pickles orß
pickles cut small. Cut the fl<®
from the cauliflower, and cut tl^B
in short pieces. Pack this mlxtt®
wide-mouthed bottles with a feß
peppers to give color. To each ■
hot cider vinegar you use add ®
blespoonful of sugar, half a te®
ful of salt, two tablespoonfuls ®
tard. Cover all the pickles a®j
while hot. The spice mixture ®
varied to suit the taste. —Chicag®'
nal. g
Cold Process Catsup. Id
Take one peck of firm, ripe to® I
Peel them cold without scalding® ■
fine in a chopping bowl and st®;
all the juice. This is very Imjß
for if all the juice is not strai®
the chopped tomatoes the cats®!
not keep. , |
Add to the tomatoes one tefll
of chopped onions, one teacuflz
chopped celery, one teacupful oß|
one-quarter of a~ teacupful of sß|
teacupful of mustard seed, oflg
spoonful of ground cloves, 08l
spoonful of black pepper, o® |
spoonful of cinnamon, .four r®|
pers chopped fine. Mix all th® I
dients together In a large stfli
then take three pints of pure c® |
egar and mix thoroughly, the® |
This catsup will keep for year® |
is taken to have the tomat® f
from juice and pure cider vl® j
used. , i ,
Southern Corn Pudding) j
Green corn can hardly be 1®
by any way of cooking, but I i
make a suggestion about a e® j
ding which came from an old® j
cook in the South. Cut the r® I
from six ears, first scoring d®
middle of each row, add two w®l
en eggs and a half pint of h® |
In which has been melted a g® I
piece of butter. Beat the wh® I
add two tablespoonfuls of sug® t
little salt. Bake in a deep ■> I
dish for three-quarters of an® |
Good Housekeeping. i ' I
French Beaha. ®
String and cut them into lot® q
Place them in a pan with plent® jJ
ing water and a little salt. J]
tender (15 to 20 minutes), a®^
done, drain and shake them li® ; ]
till dry. Add a little peppe®f|
small piece of dripping. Se®||
hot. Any cold French beans
can be served as a salad, dre^B J
oil and vinegar. ®|||
Save* th* Temper.
Before fastening the cho^®-W
table place a piece of
enough to go under
side up, on th*®
chopper on tigl®
bothered with ® iff!
To Keep
An easy wa«
bleeding it anj
13 tO put It ilfl
is cooked. TM
down the be<B
off without tS