1 How To Make the I | Quickest, Simplest Cough 1 | Remedy ® Much Drllrr than that Rm<>. » <5 Made Klnri Vou N.Te «£ § (•> fully (Guaranteed g; This home-made cough ayrup is now < used in more homes than any other cough reined)< Jtß pioiiiptncss. camp hik! ocr* laintv in conquering distressing coughs, cheat and throat colds, is really reniark ®b*. >»« c «n actually feel it take hold. -A § use will usually overcome the ordinary cough—relieves' even whooping cough quickly. Splendid, too, for bron chitis, spasmodic croup, bronchial asthma und v inter coughs. Get from any drupe ist 2»,4 ounces of ? ITi* ( J £?!*& VV i or „ , 1 ' poUl ' » pint iiottlc nud till the bottle vith plain crnnii luted sugar syrup. This gives rou—at a cost of only o4 cents—a full pint of better cough s\ rup than you could buy for &J. 50. 'Jakes but a few niiniuts to prepare. Full* directions with Pinex. Tastes good and Meier spoils. }ou will be pleßPantly surprised how! quickly it loosens drv, hoarse or tight coughs, and heals the intlamed mem* nranes in a painful cough. It also stops the formation of phlegm in the throat and bronchial tubes, thus ending the per sistent loose cough. Pinex is a most valuable concentrated compound of genuine Norway pine ex tract, rich in guaiacol, which is so heal ing to the membranes. 'I o avoid disappointment, be sure and ask your druggist for "2% ounces Pinex," and don t accept anything else. , A guarantee of absolute satisfaction, or money promptly refunded, goes with 1 •this preparation. The Pinex Co., i't. r\\ ayne, Ind. KEEPS KIDNEYS ACTIVE WITH A GLASS OF SALTS I Must flush your Kidneys oc casionally if you cat meat regularly. Noted authority tells what causes Backache and Bladder weakness. No man or woman -who eats meat ' regularly can rnako a mistake by | Hushing the kidneys occasionally, says j « well-known authority. Meat forms] uric, acid which clogs the kidney pores 1 eo they sluggishly filter or strain only part of the waste and poisons from i the blood, then you get sick. Nearly nil rheumatism, headaches, liver irouble, nervousness, constipation, | dizziness, sleeplessness, bladder dis orders come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts, or if the urine Is oloudy, offensive, full of pediment, irregular of passage or at tended by a sensation of scalding, get iibifVt four ounces of Jad Baits from liny reliable phaxmacy and take a lablespoonful in a glass of water be fore breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous trails Is made from the acid of grapes | nnd lemon juice, combined with Iltliia, j snid has been used for generations to j Hush clogged kidneys and stimulate tliem to activity, also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes irritation, thus ending bladder dis orders. Jad Salts Is inexpensive and cannot injure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which all regular meat caters should take now and then in keep the kidneys clean and the Mood pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney complications.—Adv. Don't Go To Bed With Gold Feet Says: "Often Brings on Attacks of Acute Rheumatism An ounce of prevention is worlh a pound of cure, and people who are subject to attacks of rheumatism should never go to bed with cold feet. A whole lot is being said about tak ing salts and effervescing tablets for rheumatism and sciatica, but those who suffer sharp twinges and painful swollen joints need something power ful to overcome their piteous suffer- i ing. Any broad-minded druggist will tell you that one-half teaspoonful of Kheunia taken once a day is driving more rheumatism out of alHicted peo ple than all the salts on earth. Right Jr. this neighborhood H. C. Kennedy and all druggists sell large quantities' of it, and it's the surest and most in- 1 expensive remedy about 5u cents a bottle. GENTLE RUBBING HELPS VARICOSE VEINS Rubbing the swollen veins nightly for shout two minutes with a gentle up ward stroke brings benefit to sufferers and is mighty good advice, says an nnthority. After the rubbing, which should always be toward the heart, because the blood in the veins flows that way, apply Kmerald Oil (full strength) with brush or hand. Try this simple home treatment for a ' few days and improvement will be no ticed, tlien continue until veins are re- j riticed to normal. It is very concen trated and penetrating and can be ob- I tained at any modern drug store. It is so powerful that it also reduces Goitro j and Wens. All druggists have Emerald ' Oil in the original bottle and will be glad to supply it.—Advertisement. EDIICATIUKAL School of Commerce Troup Building 15 So. Market Sq »»Day and Night School 22d y ear Commercial and Stenographic Course* Bell Fhqne 104U-J Harrisburg Business College Day and Night Bookkeeping, Shorthand. Civil Service ! Thirtieth Year 320 Market St. Harrisburg, Pa. The OFFICE TRAINING SCHOOL Kaufman Bide. 4 S. Market Sq. Training That Securea Salary l Increasing Positions In the Office Call or »»nd to-day for Interesting booklet. "Tl r Art of OrttlßU Along la tke World." Bell phone CD4-R. Try Telegraph Want Ads TUESDAY EVENING, HARRIBBURG TELEGRAPH MARCH 21, 1916. HOMLJ. GEORGE AONEWCfmMBmAIN CAPYRIASIR jar TUB C&RRUJ&Y CA SYNOPSIS CHAPTER I—Alan Wayne is sent away from Red Hill, his home, by his j uncle. J. Y., as a moral failure. Clem runs after him in a tangle of short I skirts to bid him good-by. j CHAPTER ll—Captain Wayne tells Alan of the failing of the Waynes, i i Clem drinks Alan's health on his birthday. CHAPTER lll—Judge Healey buys i a picture for Alix Lansing. The J ud j» e ! defends Alan in his business with his employers. CHAPTER IV—Alan and Alix meet , at sea, homeward bound, and start a flirtation, which becomes serious. CHAPTER V—At home, Nance Ster ling asks Alan to go away from Alix. Alix is taken to task by Gerry, her ! husband, for her conduct with Alan and defies him. CHAPTER VI —Gerry, as he thinks, sees Alix and Alan eloping, drops everything, and goes to Pernainbuco. 1 CHAPTER Vll—Alix leaves Alan |on the train and goes home to find J that Gerry haa disappeared. CHAPTER Vlll—Gerry leaves Per- I nambuco and goes to Piranhas. On [a canoe trip he meets a native girl. . CHAPTER IX—The judge fails to I trace Gerry. A baby is born to Alix. I CHAPTER X—The native girl takes Gerry to her home and shows him [the ruined plantation she is mistress i of. Gerry marries her. CHAPTER XI At Maple house | Colliiigeford tells how he met Alan— | "Ten Per Cent. Wayne"—building a ; bridge in Africa. CHAPTER Xll—Collingeford meets Alix and her baby and be gives her encouragement about Gerry. CHAPTER Xlll—Alan comes back to town but does not go home. He makes several calls in tlie city. CHAPTER XlV—Gerry begins to | Improve Margarita's plantation and I builds an irrigating ditch. CHAPTER XV—ln Africa Alan reads Clem's letters and dreams of home. | CHAPTER XVI —Gerry pastures j Lieber's cattle during the drought. A | baby comes to Gerry and Margarita. I CHAPTER XVII CollTngford 1 meets Alix In the city and finds her ' changed. , CHAPTER XVIII—AIan meets Alix. JJ. Y. and Clem, grown to beautiful I womanhood, in the city and realize* 1 | that lie has sold his birthright for a j mess of pottage. | CHAPTER XlX—Kemp and Gerry ; become friends. CHAPTER XX— Kemp and Gerry visit Lieber and the three exiles art drawn to gether by a common tl*. CHAPTER XXT—Lteber tell* his story. "Home la the anchor of a man's soul. I want to go home." CHAPTER XXIT—Tn South America Alan gets fever and his foreman prepares to send him to the coast. CHAPTER XXIII—AIan Is carried to Lieber's fa rendu, almost dead, and Gerry sees him. Alan opened his eyes and looked at him. "She is waiting. She has always waited for you to come back. She would not believe you were dead, be cause of the boy." "The boy!" groaned Gerry. "What boy ?" "Yours." said Alan. "He is a great I boy. There is a new Alix since he | came. She is as far from me and | what she was as the stars. She is a steady star. But it's all right now. You'll go back to her." ' "I can't," whispered Gerry hoarsely, more to himself than to Alan. "I've ; got a wife here. I've got a child here. ! To me he is my first-born." Alan's eyes opened, this time in won der. A twisted smile came to his lips. "You!" he said. "You!" and then the smile changed to a fnint disgust. He turned his head on the pillow away from Gerry and slept. The next morning found Gerry still at Lieber's. Outside the heavenly i bowl of blue was virgin of clouds. It stretched and domed in a sphered eter nity of emptiness. Through its de- i pressing void the sun swam slowly, ' pitilessly, as though it were loath to j mark the passing minutes. The whole ; earth baked. Strong trees wilted and turned up the wrong sides of their leaves on the sea of heat like dying fish turning up their white bellies at the last gasp. Not a breath of air stirred. Heat rose from the ground in an unbroken, visible wave. "My God." i said Alan, gazing with wistful, far seeing eyes beyond the familiar, repel lent scene, "'a homeward fever parches up my tongue.'" There was such an agony of longing in the words that Gerry was frightened. He looked quesjioningly at Lieber. "No," said Lieber, "he's not dying. | ; He was dying, but he's changed his tuiud. He's going to go home instead." ■ ——, Today And A Generation Hence The flight of time makes us think of the future. The baby ot today reflects what greatness may be " ~ J9 acquired when he yjf* jf grows u»». And any fi\\ /V /* Influence that brings / //m relief to the expectant m mother is the first ancl r~ greatest of obligations. „ T "*■ Ir There Is a splendid (I remedy known as I "Mother's Friend" thst I bas been a safeguard. A helpful daily iaflu encc, to a host of t leJ women. Applied exter j nally to the musclei they become pliant, they stretch without undue pain, there is an absence of distress, the nerves are soothed by taking away the burden of leaving all to just natural conditions. There Is in "Mother's Friend" the direct and immediate help that all expectant moth ers require. Used by their own hand, guide:! by their own minds, they learn at once tin blessed relief from morning sickness result ing from undue stretching. They experience daily calm and nightly rest. It Is Indeed "Mother's Friend." ("let a bottle today of any druggist. Then write Ilradfleld Regulator Co., 410 I.araar Bldg., Atlanta, Ga., for ona of the most entertaining and valuable little liooks avvr presented. It la worth writing j fot» ! "I believe he's right, Gerry," said Alan with a faint smile. "But I didn't I change my mind. He did It for me. He's In line for a life-saving medal. Lieber's all right" He stopped, tired out. Lieber began to talk to Gerry. "How's the water in the ditch. Mr. Lansing?" "Mighty low," said Gerry. He spoke almost atisent-mindedly. For the first time in months the ditch was far from bis thoughts. "It's hard luck." said Lieber. "The river's nefer been so low before— not in the memory of man. We do not hear the falls any more. The river Is asleep. Do you want me to send my men down again?" "It's no use." said Gerry. "I dou't dare deepen the ditch any more, it's 'way below the normal level now." Alan stirred. "What's that about a ditch?" In unhurried phrases aud a low voice Lieber told him the history of fnzeniiu riui«.» since Gerry's advent and of the great part the ditch bad played in bringing resurrection to the abandoned plantation and life to the neighboring stock. Alan cast a curious glance at Gerry. "Dangerous business," he said, "fool ing with the normal level in flood country." ( Lieber nodded and went on. He told his tale well. He had seen more than Gerry could have put into words. Gerry listened for a while, but he soon wearied. What had all that to do with him now? He wandered off and start ed to saddle True Blue. He must get away from Alan. Alan was drawing him, but he was bound in chains. He must remember that. Then, too. what Alan had said about fooling with the normal level worried him. He must go back and station a guard at the great, sluice gate. A sudden puff of air, then a breeze, then a gale, swept down on Lieber's from the southwest. The wind was hot, a furnace blast from the torrid wilderness. It carried with it whirls of dust, light, dry stioks, and, finally, small pebbles that hurtled along the ground. Gerry and his home sought : shelter by the house. Herders came running out from their quarters and gathered In front of the veranda. The wind suddenly turned cold, dropped and ceased. The dust settled. The sun blazed as before. There was not a cloud in the sky. The herders all | looked at Lieber. They did not talk. They were waiting. Lieber shrugged his shoulders. "Somewhere." he said with a wave of i his hand to the southwest, "there has | been rain and hail and that sort of ' thiug. Temperature fell and drove the hot air off the desert." He told the men, but they did not go away. They stood around, their eyes sweep ing the horizon to the southwest. At last one of them grunfed. His eyes were fixed on a distant pillar of dust. It came towards them. Lieber used his field glasses. Without taking them frotn bis eyes, he spoke. "It's a man. riding. Looks like he's riding for life. Something is up. He's riding to kill his horse." !• As the man approached, a dull rum bling filled Ihe ears of the watchers. So gradual was its crescendo that they did not notice it. The rider spurred and beat his horse to a final effort. They could see he was shouting. He drew nearer, and they heard him, 1 "Flood! Flood!" Then they noticed the rumbling. It became a roar. Far away on the horizon rose a white, ad vancing mist. The rider rolled off his staggering horse. "The flood." he gasped. "Never before has there been such a flood." Before the words were out of his mouth there was a frenzied rattle of hoofs and Gerry on True Blue tore off at a mad gallop down the trail towards Fazenda Flores. Almost at his heels followed the first mounted of the herders, riding all they knew to cut across to Piranhas ahead of the j wall of water. 1 Lieber's eyes followed Gerry's flight. Then he turned them on Alan. "That hollow down there." he said, "will be turned into a rushing river in half an Lour —perhaps less. We're Just safe here, and that's all. You see Mr. Lan sing? He's the spot farthest down the trail. I'm thinking we'll never see 1 him again." A faint flush came into Alan's cheeks. It was a flush of pride—pride in Gerry. Gerry had not hesitated. I He had not ridden off like a laggard. ! Even now they could see that he was for life—riding with all his might for the lives that shackled him. i Gerry had never ridden a horse to death before. When True Blue first staggered he put spurs to him nnd laid on his uuirt right and left. The roar of ihe river was so loud that he could not tell if he had really i beaten the flood or not., though he could see Just before him the long, snaky ridge of til" main ditch banks. He must get <>• (To Be-Continued.) . . ! i I*T*fc A T\ mUTCf Make No Engagement For Thursday Night \ i AiJuaU J. Jl IP • Everybody Will Be at KAUFMAN'S | A BAND CONCERT BY THE COMMONWEALTH BAND I 1 A Fashion Show on Living 1 Models I TWILL BE A NOVEL AFFAIR IN EVERY WAY. A T , 1 YOUR FRIENDS ARE CORDIALLY INVITED. j.rffr 1 I Buy Your Easter Suit Kaufman's First For Prettiest Millinery! f Take our advice, don't wait till later on. Assortments are n( ' l ' le P r ' ce that always saves you 1 f complete now, better choosing can't be had anywhere. Prices money. For style, quality, variety, be- ' | J lower here than elsewhere. Later your Easter Suit will cost coiningness and low prices, you i \ you more. Buy now and save. —' vvon't find a collection of Spring Hats Ip^V'ijn I • Women's and ! H » ndso » e S P rin g Suits TRIMMED HATS From 7^l Embody every distinct individual style and fab- (T7*? „ // ' / I ric feature seen only in suits sold elsewhere at Urn, (th OA A i. _ "I A A (J 1 i 1 from $35.00 to $40.00. All the newest flare ef- ' /'/ I I\\m yJI 1 T(| I J Ul I , | fects, belted or semi-belted Coats. Beautifully Hi «\ v\\ MM W I tailored throughout; all sizes l'or women and e- i i 1 r i . , . ' misses. \\ A \ Simply unmatchable for beauty. Scores of new creations i J ... , - -, - A \ \\\ \ \ in Turbans, Mushroom Effects and Sailors, Milan, Milan Hemp, J \ Women S and Misses $1 LUO \ \\ \ I Hemp Goura and Lisere Braids; all newest colors and shapes \ 1 ' c *T *1 l o •• <lll ~~~ » \ \ J for women and children. £ [' , Smart lauored suits at 1 jtfk n + ■ -a ttatc ka J Another Kaufman Leader. Those Suits are ac- JIN ft UII trimillCu. IlAlo / Qf* 1" f\ Sk# 00 \ tually soiling elsewhere at from SIB.OO to $22.50. —————_________ W \J wv «|p I•✓ \J W . ( i ssssrwK 3W? . In »s thc seasoi, ' s ««««»«■»«•»• «*««• *»*. a« i . , models from which to choose. Your style, color sizes. & . , anil size among them. Second Floor, Front S, MILLINLRY I)HiPARTMKNT, SECOND FLOOR. 2 I *■ 1 V i \ :isf SPECIAL ITEMS '( SPECIAL ITEMS ". > D T7 T ! '' I from our new notion From Our Drug Sundry special Bargain Basement economies i i \ DEPARTMENT Department Brown Musljn, 36 inches wide; yard C- . | M Triple plated steel pins, 300 count, _ „ _ . ' , <JC # S. S. Hair Curlers, sin pack, for 10c Powder, can «c JQc Ollting Cloth, light Colors; V3rd 7*» I ' C Shell or amber Hair Pins, per box, 4c Violet Rice Powder, pink and 2 £ / C I 'j C Mourningf pins,' ioa„d so couni; per 25c wiiiiam.- shaving sticks |j| 9C Apron Gingham, all colors; yard fjl/ n 'l » f •'nn'f.oTS'iiif r <i' J ? C i' < °' pieces. Bo Compressed Rouge with Puff, 100 ' , J Sllk'Taffeta scain'binding, wblte"an(l gT.o Eromo Seltzer 10* Pillow Tubing Mlislin, 42 inches wide ; yd. 1 Or» # colors, per bolt »c Bella Donna Plasters .... £ 2 1 Li lUC , . % White and flesh colored Dre«s ;V» <rx t • « . , , , , M Shields, silk finish, per pair .. 8e Philips Milk of Magnesia ... -Oc \g c ggfj Ticking, 32 inches Wide J yard ... 1 O i/*% , it FIRST FLOUR. FRONT. FIFtST FLOOR, FRONT & — J I£tYj C I i f 15c Fine Dress Ginghams, 32 inches wide; yard.. 8c > < Two B| S S P ec,al ltemß From onr New Rlbb ® n De P'- 59c Muslin Sheets. 81x90 inches; each i ' I I NEW SPRING RIBBONS—Bought to Sell For 50c. r% A i ; f Special at, yard ZtC $1.50 Bed Spreads, full size; each. .. . 97c t ( M blnations. 11 69c Pattern Table Cloths, hemstitched; each AQr-1 \ 1 REGULAR SOc TAFFETA RIBBONS. Very Spe- Or- ~ # ( % cial, at, yard jOC $2.50 Woolnap Blankets; pair ... $1.59 I % spring colors. $1.50 Colored Bed Spreads; each Q7r» f # FIRST FLOOR, FRONT —— M MIDDLETOWN IS NOW PROSPEROUS [Continued From First Page.] j dletown Tube Works, which employed ! more than a thousand men, was ab- j sorbed by the United States Steel Cor poration and finally was taken away.! To many persons the town appeared j doomed. Then came a fire which J practically wiped out. the business dis trict of the borough and no hope teemed to remain. But the towns | people stood together and supported! moves for town betterment. The in- [ dustries which remained in the borough began to enlarge their inter- j eats and gradually began to add more] help. Outputs became larger and the demand for "made in Middletown" goods increased. At the present time every enterprise in the borough is running full time and every plant is willing to employ more help. I Just now there are many men work- Ung in Middletown who reside in other ' towns and they are quite anxious to I | move here but are unable to do so j because of the scarcity of houses. To eliminate this condition it is quite likely that during the coming sum » mer quite a number of new homes will he erected. And the outputs of Middletown in • dustries are known in all parts of the f country and South America. Freight » cars of all kinds are made here; Mid i dletown Is the home of a large stove ' works and modern foundry, and shoes, ' hosiery and cigars are other products I of the borough. 5 The Middletown Car Company is the largest concern in the borough and at the present time is employing be tween 800 and 900 men. Freight '. cars of all descriptions are manufac t tured and the great majority are ship ped to foreign countries. Many are • now in use on the South American l railroads and quite a few are being ; pulled over war-torn Kurope. At the present the company is turning out a " I mammoth order for one of the allied 8 j governments of Europe. e The car works were opened a num ber of years ago and with increased business came the enlarging of the s plant. About .three years ago there e were a few more than 300 men work ing at the car works but the company !' has made some rapid strides and dur • . Ing these three years the working s ' force has been greatly increased. B Men are being employed almost daily, at the plant it is said, and al • though there is not a scarcity of labor j the company is willing to employ all iof the help available. The Middletown Furniture Com pany conducts another of thel borough's industries and at this plant j . about 25 men are employed. The fac j tory was opened In 1 873 and since > that time furniture of many patterns! • has been made. The company spe- j ciallzes in business furniture and 9 many pieces of this are finished and t shipped to many parts of the coun j try The output includes tables, counters, showcases, wallcases, store shelving, church furniture, bank and! ! office fittings, and druggists' preserip- \ r tion cases. The shoe business in Middletown is I one of the borough's most important. !• I industries and daily 3,700 pairs of! i. j shoes are produced. The factory here j is owned by the A. S. Kreider Com pany, which also operates factories in < Annvllle, Palmyra and Kllzabethtown. j Another Is now under construction In I J Lebanon. The output of the local j plant consists of misses', children's and McKay shoes anil in the manufac ture of these 400 persons are used, 150 of whom are girls. With the new machinery, recently Installed, the company, is planning to increase the factory's output and with in a few months it is believed that the number of pairs finished daily will total 4,000. Seven years ago the Kreider Com pany built a new factory here and employed between 75 and 100 men and women. Business grew and with It a number of people on the payroll. New machinery was added as condi tions warranted and last year an ad dition to the' building had to be con structed. At. that time the plant's out put was only 2,500 pairs dally so that to-day the output is just, about 1,200 pairs more than lar' year at this time. The shoe industry has become one on which Mlddletown is now relying for the weekly payroll at trie plant now totals $4,000. Kreider shoes are sold In almost every pari of the country and are dis tributed by the company's own i agencies. The Kreider Company main tains offices in New York, Philadel phia, Pittsburgh, Chicago, and St. Louis. Mlddletown Is known, too, for its stoves. Wincroft stoves, manufac tured by the Wincroft Stove Works, are known all over the county for their quality and the 150 men employed at the plant are kept busy turning out Ihe product in all seasons of the year. The business was started in 1856 by Seymour Raymond. The plant at that time was a little one-story black smithshop on the site of the present, four-story building which is about 200 times the size of the original struc ture. Joseph Campbell was then taken into the business and work was carried on by this firm for some years. | Changes in ownership were made at various limes and the plant came to |he known as the Wincroft Stove j Works. The present officers of the I concern are Armour W. Brehnan, of [ Philadelphia, president; J. G. Balfour,' ! Philadelphia, secretary and treasurer; j |K. M. Colquhoun, Mlddletown, vice-] president and general manager. Busi ness under the new management is | exceptionally good and the output at the present time is 50 per cent, over the output for the same period of last year. In addition to the stove business, the company maintains a well venti lated and modern foundry and in ad dition to its own works, castings are made for a gas stove and gas waten | heating company in Philadelphia. The stove plant is among the best , located in Middletown and sidings of ! both the Pennsylvania and P. & R. I railroads run to the buildings. I Cigars are made In Middletown. j also and just now the output of the | Middletown Cigar Factory, a branch -lof the United Cigar Manufacturing {Company, is 13,000 daily. All of the | cigars are shipped to, western States. The business was established in Mid* I dletown eleven years ago. and at one time more than 300 girls were em ployed in the factory. With the open- Mng of other industries in the borough, ■ however, girls left the place and there I | Is now a scarcity of help In the fac tory as only about 80 people are on the payroll. E. W. Buckwalter says! 'he would give SSO If some person | | would bring him 100 girls. Industrial Middletown is completed 'by P. hosiery mill, owned by the 11. j O. Homberger Manufacturing Com pany, which maintains plants in Ncw | port, Lyker.s and Philadelphia. Kigh-j teen years ago the hosiery mill was opened and business lins l>een carried 1 on successfully Mine a. Two hundred people are given employment at the plant and daily 1,425 dozen pairs of men's, women's and children's stock ings are produced. The original ! building of the company was two j stories high and about two years ago j a third story was added to carry on | the business. THE MOST rXKIXDKST CUT The truest and most devoted friend that man ever had is the little inani- i mate bundle of nerves that stands guard by his bedside through the dead hours of the night, its palpitating i | little heart spreading cheer and con-) I fidence over the surrounding gloom. I What Makes a Woman a Good Cook?— How Steero Cubes Help A good cook? What contain the blended es does that mean? sences of beef, vegetables It means having skill and an d spices, knowledge of how to im- You can prove this by part flavor to the dishes drinking one cap of hot prepared. Steero, made by pouring If your cooking has fla- boiling water on a Steero vor, you are a good cook. Cube. If it lacks flavor, a few You'll taste all those fla- Steero Cubes in your kit- vors and you will like chen, used with judgir#:t, them. Imagine how well will lift your cooking out they would go in a roast, a of the "plain" class into gravy, a pot-pie or a sauce, the "good" class. Steero Cubes will im- Steero Cubes are con- prove your cooking like a y centrated flavors. They course in a cooking school. / Get them from your nearest Druggist, Gro- / M cer or Delicatessen Dealer in boxes of 12, 50 X or 100 Cubes. Be sure to get Steero Cubes, f Sckiaffdin A C._ DirtrMtoton. Naw Y«rk ZjT STEERO^L. CUBES 19 Mid» by meh«n Pi«<uot» Co., N«w Tatk I San Francitco, 1915 Simply Add Boiling Wtte Nil t" I Yet man often forgets the debt of gratitude he owes this faithful and tireless little friend for the sleepless, watchful hours it subjects itself :(o in order.that he may slumber in sc- J curity and comfort, and when it sinus ! its merry morning lay 1 have soon j him, instead of bestowing fond | caresses, reach from his warm quilts, j grasp it ruthlessly and slam it into | the farthest and darkest corner of i the room, crushing the dainty hands that seemed uplifted in an attitude of horror and protection, scornfully mattering such uncouth and un ; worthy reproaches as these: "Damn i that blinkety-blank alarm clock an.v --i how!" then return to his snoring.— i Zim in Cartoons Magazine. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers