Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, January 18, 1918, Page 9, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    WHITER PUDDINGS
Tasty Dishes Made According to
V. S. Food Administration Con
servation Lines.
In wintertime we like plum pud
dings and fruit cakes. And we may
have them, says the United States
Food Administration, if we use re
ceipts like these:
Plum Pudding
1 cup dried bread crumbs, % cup
vegetable oil, 1 cup corn syrup, 1
cup seeded raisins, 1 cup currants,
'6 cup finely cut citron, Ms cup fine
ly cut figs, 3 tablespoon candied
lemon peel. 1 tablespoon salt, %
teaspoon cinnamon, 14' teaspoon
cloves, '/4 teaspoon ginger, % cup
fruit juice, 1 cup rye flour.
Mix in the order given and add
enough cold water to make a stiff
mixture. Turn into a well-oiled
pudding mold or into two smaller
molds, filling the molds only two
thirds full. Cover the mold tightly
and place in boiling water and boil
six to seven hours. Remove the
pudding from the mold when cold.
This may be made two weeks before
it is to be served, but it must be,
reheated by boiling one hour just be
fore serving. Serve with pudding
sauce.
Fruit Pudding
1-3 cup vegetable fat, 1 cup mo
lasses, 1 cup sour milk, 1 teaspoon
soda, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, \-t tea
spoon cloves, '/j teaspoon salt, 2 %
cups rye fiour, IVt cups raisins cut
fine, % cup currants.
Combine the melted fat, molasses
and sour milk. Sift together the
soda, baking powder, spices and 2
cups of the flour. Add the liquid
to the dry ingredients. Finally stir
in the fruit mixed with the remain
ing flour. Turn into a greased mold.
Steam four hours. Serve with a
fruit sauce.
Fruit Sauce
1 cup fruit syrup, % cup corn
syrup, 1 teaspoon cornstarch, 1 tea
spoon butter substitute.
The syrup from the apricots,
peaches, cherries, quinces or any
fruit may be used. The amount of
sweetening will depend upon the
acidity of the fruit. Mix the corn
starch with a little of the cold fruit
syrup. Add the rest of the corn and
fruit syrups. Boil together five
minutes. Add the butter substitute
last.
JOB HAD NOTHING
ON HIM, HE SAYS
Mr. Stliueling Was All Run Down
and Had Many Boils
TAN LAC PROVED VALUE
"AVlien it comes to a question of
suffering from boils and carbuncles,
.Job had nothing on me," says W. F.
Stimeling, who is employed in the
Br'dge and Construction Department
of the Steel Works and who lives at
1821 Fulton street, Harrisburg, Pa.
"X was all run down. The boils
would swell up all over my body and
I would no sooner get rid of one
batch than another would come.
"My wife heard about Tanlac and
she started me in on it And it sure
did do the work for my boils began
to fade away in a day or two and
now I haven't even got one left as
a souvenir."
"I feel about 100 per cent, better
in every way and I give all tho
credit to Tanlac."
Tanlac is now being Introduced
here at Gorgas' Drug Store.
Tanlac is also sold at the Gorgas
Drug Store in the P. R. R. Station;
in Carlisle at W. G. Stephens' Phar
macy; Elizabethtown, Albert W.
Cain; Greencastle, Charles B. Carl,
Middletown, Colin S. Few's Phar
macy; Waynesboro, Clarence Croft's
Pharmacy; Mechanicsburg, H. F.
Brunhouse.—Adv.
V&' " 1 am "'ways watching the
. V'v, trttrry'mcrrTiima, groves in which the fruits I
Vn neon and prescribe are grown and pre- *'
] P" red ,or shipment to you."
1 err&ng&gMACC —Dr. Sealdnceet Citrus. ft-Vl ijjfe i'_
Choice Florida oranges and grapefruit are
marketed under the Sealdsweet brand by
Pl growers cooperating in a non-profit organ
|&g> ization, the Florida Citrus Exchange.
if you eat more Sealdsweet fruits are ripened on the trees
grapefruit an d are packed by white-gloved workers.
less meats and M§< .
grains, there will Sealdsweet Oranges and Grapefruit Help
be a greater You to Maintain Strength and Enjoy Life !mf
quantity of the Wjl /®rof
latter foods for They are thin-skinned,heavy Dr. Charles B. Campbell, for
war uses. with juice and always pleas- merly a successful physician , nV- •'
ing to the taste, even though of Washington, speaking of 7 J Svto
A well-known sometimes rough and unin- citrusfruits.saidafewmonths R&SnSy h'&k'£
health authority viting to the eye. These fruits ago: " Many persons suffer / '
says citrus fruits are both food and drink and from a lack of acidity in the EgiSSgl .// \Hy}> I
are "medicine those who eat them regularly system without knowing it. 11 IhbM
that tastes bet- have better health and enjoy There is no corrective equal S
ter than food and life more thoroughly. to citrus fruit juices." fe
food that is more V -'C.P t- 1
potent than Sealdsweet Fruits Sold Write for Free Copy of WWff \W(
medicine.' by Dealers New Recipe Book 'rv j
Sealdsweetorange* GooddealersliketosellSeald- Illustrated booklet of 3fl S|j
require but little if sweet grapefruit and oranges; pages giving 69 interesting E)
any sugar. Nornd they please particular cus- recipes, and advice of noted
SJsd.wrtrJpe. tomers. Ask yours to supply specialists on how to use Kjln
fruit, many penoni you and insist that he do so. citrus fruits free.
prefer them with '2\ WT, t \
• alt instead of
FLORIDA CITRUS EXCHANGE \WA W
L - J Tampa, Florida
FRIDAY EVENING,
Bringing Up Father • Copyright, 1917, International News Service ,*- * • *— * By McManus
f > f¥i L ' ">U4T LL 1 ( "' aS SO,IE "•*<■• NO- OUST ~
4>V §3 MC OUD 'Wi SOME EH? •■*- AUU tour lEY customers | j
THE YUKON
By William MacLeod Raine
(Continued)
"I reckon you travel where you
want to, Gid—same as I 0o."
"Maybe so. I shouldn't wonder if
you'd find out quite soon enough
what I'm doing here. You never can
tell," the old man retorted with a
manner that concealed volumes.
Those who were present remem
bered the words and in the light of
what took place later thought them
significant.
"Anyhow, it is quite a social event
for Kusiak," Macdonald suggested
with a smile of irony.
Without more words Holt turned
back to his bargaining. The big
Scotsman went on his way, remem
bered that he wanted to see the
cashier of the bank which he con
trolled, and promptly forgot that
old Gid existed.
The old man concluded his pur
chase and drove up to the hotel he
hind one of the best dog teams in
Alaska.
Gideon asked a question of the
porter.
"Second floor. That's his room
up there," the man answered, point
ing to a window.
"Oh, you, seven —eighteen—nine-
ty-nine," the little miner shouted
up.
Elliot appeared at the window.
"Well, I'll be hanged! What are
you doing here, Old-Timer?"
"Onct I knew a man lived to be
grandpa minding his own business."
grinned tho little man. "Come down
and I'll tell you all about it, boy."
In half a minute Gordon was be
side him. After the first greetings
the young man nodded toward the
dog team.
"How did you persuade Tim Ryan
to lend you his huskies?"
"Why don't you take a paper and
keep up with the news, son? These
huskies don't belong to Tim."
"Meaning that Mr. Gideon Holt is
the owner?"
"You've done guessed it," ad
mitted the miner complacently.
He had a right to b<? proud of the
team. It was a famous one even in
the North. It had run second for
two years in the Alaska sweep
stakes to Macdonald's great Siberian
wolfhounds. The leader. Butch,
was the hero of a dozen races and a
hundred savage fights.
"What in Halifax do you want
with the team?" asked Elliot, sur
prised. "The whole outfit must
have cost a small fortune."
"Some dust," admitted Gideon
proudly. He winked mysteriously at
Gordon. "I got a use for this team,
if anyone was to ask you."
"Haven't taken the government
mail contract, have you?"
"Not so you could notice it. I'll
tel! you what I want with this team,]
as tho old sayin' is." Holt lowered j
his voice and narrowed slyly his,
little beadlike eyes. "I'm going to
put a crimp In Colby Macdonald.
That's what I aim to do with it."
"How?"
The miner beckoned Elliot closed
and whispered in his ear.
CHAPTEIt XIX
In tlic Dead of Night
While Kusiak slept that night the
wind shifted. It came roaring across
the range and drove before it great
scudding clouds heavily laden with
sleety snow. From dark till dawn
the roar of the wind filled the
night. Before morning heavy drifts
had wiped out the roads and sheeted
the town in virgin white unbroken
by trails or furrows.
With the coming of daylight the
tempest abated. Kusiak got into
its working clothes and dug itself
out from the heavy blanket of
white that had tucked it in. By noon
the business of the town was under
way again. That which would have
demoralized the activities of a
Southern city made little difference
to these Arctic Circle dwellers.
Roads were cleared, paths shoveled,
stores opened. Children in parkas
an dfur coats trooped to school and
studied through the short after
noon by the aid of electric light.
Dusk fell early and with it came
a scatter of more snow. Mrs. Self
ridge gave a dinner-dance at the
club that night and her guests came
in furs of great variety and much
value. The hostess outdid herself to
make the affair tho most elaborate
of the season. Nobody in Kusiak of
any social importance was omitted
from the list of invited except Gor
don Elliot Even the grumpy old
HXRXUBBtma TELEGHKPH
cashier of Macdonald's bank —an
old bachelor who lived by himself |
in rooms behind those in which the'
banking was done—was persuaded]
to break his custom and appear in j
a rusty old dress suit of the vintage
of '95.
The grizzled cashier —his name was;
Robert Milton—left the clubhouse
early for his rooms. It was snow- j
ing, but the wind had died down.!
Contrary to his custom, he had!
taken two or three glasses of wine. I
His brain was excited so that he j
knew he could not sleep. He de-j
cided to read "Don Quixote" by the (
stove for an hour or two.
Arrived at the bank, he let him- j
self into his rooms and locked the!
door. He stooped to open the draft!
of the stove when a sound stopped j
him halfway. The cashier stood rigid i
still crouched waiting for a repiti- j
tion of the noise. It came once!
more —the low, dull rasping of a
file.
(To be Continued)
Daily Dot Puzzle
'* 17
ls * 7 .18
1 4 , .19
13 • 2° 2J
• • 22
II • *2.
25 |
IO Z •
* 1 24
•9 * 27 2 ' 25
* >
• 7 * 5 * 32 '
8 . • ; 33*
53 .3a 34 *
* *3S
~ *37
52 SI •
5 • 4o
•4<> 4l
43 •
45
Draw from one to two and so on
to the end.
| Fashions of To-Day - By May Manton
silt
ILlf r 111
9606 Dresi with Deep Collar, 36 to 44
Hurt. Price 15 cents.
THEIR MARRIED LIFE
Copyright by International News Service
Helen had been hoping that War-]
ren would say nothing this year]
about the yearly family party at!
Carrie's. Before old Mrs. Curtis had
died Helen had endured a family
I arty on almost every holiday, and
now that Warren's father was liv
ing with Carrie and Fred Carrie had
invariably thought it her duty to
continue the custom. Carrie always
made Helen feel that it was a duty
ana not a pleasure.
Now that Winifred was growing
older Helen felt more than ever,
that Carrie's attitude of disapproval
was bad for the child, and would
bo sure to incite trouble of some
kind. Hoy was growing older, too,
and was beginning to develop bold
tendencies that Helen did not like.
He had all of his childish faults,
with others added. He played with
boys who were older than he was,
and his attitude toward Winifred
savored of a boastful patronage
which Helen did not fancy.
When Carrie and Fred had been
in shopping Just before Christmas,
they had come up to the apartment
for dinner one evening. Hoy had
been with them, and as a special
favor Winifred had been allowed to
sit up.
"Just this once," Helen had con
ceded. And Roy had said jeering
ly, "Oh, what a baby, still eating
supper alone."
Helen had felt like boxing his
ears, but Carrie had smiled indul
gently, and had remarked acidly,
"You do make a perfect little ten
derfoot of her, don't you, Helen?"
1-ooking at Warren for commenda
tion.
Helen did not know herself how
Ehe managed to get them all oft for
homo without precipitating anything
like a quarrel, and afterward she re
membered with a thriill of exulta
tion that nothing had been said
about the yearly party.
Helen and Warren had been in
vited to the Bells to spend Christ
mas, and Helen had longed to intro
duce this idea at some favorable
time when, fortified by a good din
ner and a cigar, Warren could be
induced to accept. Then if he re
membered afterward Helen could
say that it was too late, as they had
already accepted the invitation from
the Bells. The prospect of a quiet
week-end in the country with the
chance for some chummy talks with
Babbie and the long quiet evening
over the open fire appealed to
Helen. She did hope that nothing
might happen to make Warren re
member.
"Warren," she said one evening,
"you've never told me what you
want to do about the Bells' invita
tion."
"Oh, I'd forgotten about it. I
guess," Warren remarked genially.
"What do you want to do about it ?"
"Well, don't you think it would
be nice to go?" asked Helen trying
not to appear 'too eager. "It was
lovely up there in the Fall. They
This is a gown that can be
utilized for many different needs.
1 he blouse is just a simple one
but with a very new collar that
almost covers it and which gives
a jacket suggestion. The skirt
is simply full and gathered with
a tunic over the sides, and it
gives most becoming and at
tractive lines. You can make
it all of one material or you can
make the blouse and tunic of
Georgette or of any such ma
terial with the skirt of soft
satin or make some similar com
bination. As it is shown here,
it is adapted to general wear,
but if the shirrings of the skirt
are made adjustable it will be
come available for the expectant
mother. In the illustration, a
soft satin is used throughout
and the trimming is silk sou
tache arranged over a simple
design. Soutache is being util
ized to trim materials of all
weights and sorts and it is
exceedingly handsome while it
is also simple to apply. If you
prefer the effect, you can couch
a heavy worsted thread over the
design in place of using braid,
and on some materials it gives
a very smart effect.
For the medium size will be
needed, 7 yards of material 36
inches wide, yards 44, with
1% yards of either width for the
tunic.
The pattern No. 9606 is cut
in sizes from 36 to 44 inches
bust measure. It will be mailed
to any address by the Fashion
Department of this paper on re
ceipt of fifteen cents.
JAWU/ttY 18, 1918.
have the dearest place, Warren, and
the country air would be splendid
for Winifred. Besides, it would be
a lovely change for both of us and
we do enjoy the Bells so much."
"That's right. Well, I'm game to
go if you want to. Might as well
write them a letter and say we'll be
alopg."
"Warren, you dear, I'm so glad
you want to go. I'll write the let
ter to-night, dear, and get it off. It
won't take a minute."
W 7 arren went back to his paper,
and silence ensued for a few min
utes, save for the scratching of
Helen's pen. She was delighted with
her success, and was frantic to get
the note off before anything could
happen. They would have such a
lovely time.
The tinkle of the telephone inter
rupted both of them, and Helen
started up.
"I'll go dear, I wonder who can
bo calling at this time of the night?"
"Probably the wrong number,"
Warren returned.
Helen at the telephone took down
the received and said sweetly,
"Hello."
"Hello," came Carrie's unmistaka
bly thin, disagreeable voice across
the wire.
"O, you Carrie, how are you?"
said Helen, her heart sinking.
"We're all fine. Say, Helen, I
called up to remind you of our
yearly party. Don't forget that you
and Warren come out here for the
week end:"
"Why, we had forgotten about it,
Carrie," said Helen, trying desper
ately to save her shceme, and fail
ing utterly.
"What's that?" Warren called out,
"Carrie calling?"
"Just a minute, Carrie," Helen
said, putting her hand over the re
ceiver and speaking to Warren.
nyMBI January Clearance
Mjjjim LADIES'BAZAAR
Coats - Suits - Furs
=~ s; :ij Not a garment in our entire stock you
JWlwould not be proud to wear Now of
fered at lower prices than we could pro-
Choice of Any Plush Coat, now 1 Q-75
Many Pur Trimmed —Some Salts' Finer Plush—Esquimette—
t Sizes 18 to 49. Values to $35.00.
Beautiful Cloth Coats, now 14' 7 ° 19' 75 to 34 75
Many with selected fur trimming—fine cloths—Values $19.75 to $55.00.
Splendidly Tailored Suits . . .1 -i 9.75 O/f.75
Styles suitable for Spring wear but at less than half the " J_
coming spring prices sizes 16 to 51.
Taupe Fox Scarfs, now . 16' 75 19' 75 an d 21 75
Values $27.50 to $35.00
New Dresses and Blouses Arriving Daily
jadies Bazaar
8-10-12 S. FOURTH ST.
Harrisburg's Garment Institution
"Yes, Warren, it's Carrie, she
called up to ask us out there."
"That's right, we always go out
there, don't we? I'd forgotten all
about it."
"Yes, dear, but the Bells have
asked us for the week end. Couldn't
we get out of going out to Carrie's
this year? She only asks us because
we have always kept up that cus
tom."
"I'm afraid Carrie would think it
funny," Warren returned. "It's an
old family arrangement, and I don't
think it's fair to her not to go as
usual."
"And I don't think it's fair to ma
to refuse the Bells' invitation,"
flashed out Helen, "when I want to
go so much and you said you would
go."
"Of course, you'd rather go,"
Warren said, coming over to the
telephone quickly. "You have never
liked Carrie and you never take any
pains to hido the fact. Here, give
me the receiver, I'll talk to her."
And Helen, relinquishing the tele
phone to him, felt a surge of hot
linger sweep ovv her as she heard
him tell Carrie that of course they
would be delighted to come.
Advice to the Lovelorn
BY BEATRICE FAIRFAX
Christian and Jew
DEAR MISS FAIRFAX:
I am twenty-one and dearly love
a man twenty-three. He has asked
me to marry him, but not for four
years. lam willing to wait, but my
mother objects to our match as we
are not of the same faith. Do you
think my mother is doing right by
objecting? P. L.
This is a question too personal
for mc ao answer with any show
of authority. Your mother has a
right to her own attitude in the mat
ter, but I do not happen to agree
with her attitude. What keeps such
\Qualitij Garments Alway
marriages from failing is toleration,
broad-mindedness, sympathetic un
derstanding. If you have them yon
are safe to proceed; if you do not
possess them you are likely to find
only unhappiness in your marrin^o.
NO STOMACH PAIN,
GAS, INDIGESTION
IN FIVE MINUTES
"Pape's Diapepsin" is the best
antacid and stomach regu
lator known.
"Really does" put upset stomachs
in order—"really does" overcome in
digestion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn
and sourness due to acid fermenta
tion in five minutes—that—Just that
—makes Pape's Diapepsin the larg
est selling stomach antacid and reg
ulator in the world. If what you
eat ferments and turns sour, you
belch gas and eructate undigested
food or water; head is dizzy and
aches; breath foul; tongue coated:
your insides filled with indigestible
waste, remember the moment
"Pape's Diapepsin" comes in contact
with the stomach all such distress)
vanishes. It's truly astonishing—al
most marvelous, and the Joy is its
i harmlessness.
A large fifty-cent case of Pape's
Diapepsin is worth its weight in gold
to men and women who can't gee
their stomachs regulated. It belongs
in your home —should always be kept
handy in case of a sick, sour, upset
stomach during the day or at night.
It's the quickest, surest antacid for
the stomach in the world.
9