fIJSB the KXTMKJ jjPj| War Time Economy By Mrs. Kate Brew Vaughn THE woman of the United States has a mission to perform as well as a great saving to ef fect. The world has looked upon us as a nation of great extravagance, particularly in food, and now that the people of several countries are dependent upon America for food supply and America is dependent largely upon the attitude of the wom an for its conservation, we have the opportunity to set the standard, not only of patriotic sacrifice, but to demonstrate we can keep the wolf from the door and the family at home in excellent condition, thereby relieving the physicians and nurses for duty at the front. To do this re quires not only the desire 'to be pa triotic, but a willingness to study the food question as we would be compelled to do in any other branch In which we wished to excel. Do not fail to balance your meals and to do this remember that a balanced meal has a food from each of five groups: First—Milk, cheese, beans, peas, lentils, peanuts, fish, game, poultry and meat. Second—Cereals, oatmeal, cornmeal, grits, rice, potatoes, tapioca, maca roni. Third Sugar, honey,' molasses, syrups, jelly, etc. • Fourth—Vegetables and fruits. Fifth—Fats, butter, cream, vege table oils and nuts. You can exchange one food for an other in any group, but it is not permissible to exchange a food in one group for a food in another group. For example, cheese and eggs may be used in place of meat, but sugar cannot be used in place of milk or meat or butter. Use milk in abundance for growing children, but do not waste a drop. Use it in some way at every meal for chil dren—they need it to enable them to grow strong and keep well and it is excellent for grown people, too. Drink milk hot or cold, use it on cereals, make it into cocoa for chil dren and often into chocolate for adults. Even at a high pr!''e, milk is cheap for children. When using co coa select a brand particularly adapt ed for children's consumption and digestion one containing twenty per cent, butter fat is ideal—not too lean and not too fat (meaning that if it is too rich in butter fat it is hard to digest). Do not give chil dren tea or coffee. They are not con sidered food and the child should not form a taste for them. Soy bean meal is excellent and should be used frequently in that it replaces meat and fat to a great ex tent. When using no eggs in soy Pure Cocoa means ground cocoa beanc ' •iMfP'IIbI with the surplus co- j|Jßf i coa butter removed —and nothing added. ||| Lowney's Cocoa. loW/teY-S COCOA At grocers, in flavor tight tins, 10c to 50c sizes —for instance this war time dessert is sweetened largely by the preserves you put up last summer Ric* M%ld with Fruit lUk enTlop Knos Spark llnjr GcUttna la rth np r,f cold water Un minutes an 4 4UmW by •Undlac cup la list Ur. Add on-h*lf cap •? •Ny canned or frb fnHt jnicM at hand 'dwrrr, rook ad pioaapeU, rupbrrr or atrawbarry ara all it. "tsurtsj'zrxv s&i s ••latloa and mix thoroughly. Cool alirhtlr. add ona • cap whipped eraam or milk Tarn Into molds. which may bo aacoratad with rharrloa. alicaa of plnvappla or other fruita. Barra with or without craam. • • • SUGAR is a vital part of our daily food. Know ing that thousands of women were putting up sweet preserves last summer, Mrs. Knox felt that if she could devise ways of using that "preserve" sugar in connection with other foods, she would be of service not only to the economical house wife but to the nation as well. The above suggestion is only one of the war-time recipes con . tained in her new book, "Food Economy." There are 137 more. You should have this book. A post card request will bring it to t you free if you mention your dealer's name and address. . CHARLES B. KNOX GELATINE CO., INC. 19* Knox Avenue, Johnstown, N. Y. KNOX/^7 SPARKLING / / GELATINE WEDNESDAY EVENING, HJLRRI6BURG TELEGRAPH MAY 22, 1918. Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1918, International News Service *■* *■* *•* By McMaUus -X I A^l , IcßAOoub- I OR ITHE * II i I HELLO -1* M \ I COULDN'T IbßlNii ANX OF - WHAT lb f~ AND FIND OUT ! TOO - SUP? T fek 1 /^M r &TO UP i WHO CsCLONC'b TO " T "" R ' SCKET ' > OVER üb? J " ,v> OirSTX MOORE' ~ bean muffin receipt an increased amount of baking powder should be used. This will be found very sat isfactory if the baking powder is made of cream of tartar and soda. Gelatine, a protein sparer, is not only an important food in itself, but particularly important now as a ve hicle for using leftovers in small I quantities. Used in conjunction with ' meat, poultry, vegetable stock or i with vinegar or vegetable juices, we j have aspics in which to mold vege- | tables, fruits, fish, etc. Gelatine should he clear, crisp and tender. I The following is a dependable' method: I envelope sparkling gelatine, 1 | cup sugar, 2 cups boiling water, 1 j cup fruit juice. Three-fourths cup cold water, stir i and allow to stand for ten minutes. Bring sugar and water to boiling point. All gelatine softened In cold i water and stir until dissolved. Add fruit' juices and steam througr* cheesecloth into molds rinsed In coU water. If it is desirable that gela tine should be very clear, an empty j eggshell may be placed in gelatine for a few seconds before straining. When fruits or nuts are molded into j this, pour into mold, first gelatine j in small quantities, and allow to con geal. then solid particles like fruit j and on top of same small amount of i gelatine, which when congealed will i hold same in place. Continue until mold is filled. 3 tablespoons sugar, 3 tablespoons i cocoa, pinch of salt, 2 cups boiling water, 2 cups scalded milk. Mix cocoa, sugar and salt. Add | to boiling water and cook for four: minutes. Add milk (scalded in dou- ' ble boiler). . Beat well with egg beater before serving. Soy Bean Muffin* I cup soy bean meal, 1 cup corn ! meal, 1 teaspoon salt, 4 teaspoons cream of tartar baking powder, 2 tablespoons molasses, % cup dates, IVt cups milk (or condensed milk and water in equal quantity, leaving out molasses). Sift corn meal, soy bean meal, salt and baking powder together. Add j the milk and molasses if used and dates and beat well. Bake in greas ed and well-heated muffin rings for about twenty-five minutes. The U. S. Food Administration Says Potatoes Instead of AVheat One more potato a day to drive the Germans away! One medium-sized potato gives you as much starph as two slices of bread. Potatoes at Their Best An old king is said to have-test ed each cook before hiring him by asking him to boil a potato. Even the beet potato can be spoiled by a poor cook. To boil them so that they will be lit for a king drop the unpeeled potatoes into boiling "Salt ed water. Cook twenty to thirty minutes. Drain dry at once. The most valuable salts are near the po tato-skin and are wasted in peel in 3 .before cooking. For Best Slashed Potatoes Peel the boiled potatoes, inash and beat until very light, adding salt, butter or fat and hot milk. A half cup of milk to six potatoes. If dinner is not ready'to serve, pile lightly in a pan and set in oven to brown. , ' Potato Puffs 2 cups mashed potatoes. • 1 cup grated cheese. 2 eggs. V 4 cup milk. 1 teaspoon salt. Add the milk to the potato and beat until thoroughly blended, ndd the beaten egg and salt, gradually adding the grated cheese. Bake in greased tins or gapieskins in slow oven. Pittsburgh Potatoes 1 quart potatoes cut in cubes. H lb. cheese. * can pimentoes. 1 onion. 2 cups white cause. (Use barley or rice flour for thickening.) % teaspoon salt. Cook potatoes and onions, finely chopped, in boiling water, salted, for five minutes. Add pimentoes cut in small pieces and cook seven minutes, drain, turn into buttered dish and pour over white sauce mix ed with cheese and salt. Bake in moderate oven until potatoes nre soft. Daily Dot Puzzle .27 73 * 2b 25 24 •18 \ 23 30. 4 ? \* ~ '. 9 V 31. / 41 •*'7 • . / •* 20 32. • / .'5 / 43* 14 33. / £ \ % . / 37. 44. 6 \ * fit, 45 * 7 \ #,S . • .6 \ 46 £55 4 S5. ' 54* ',3 51 52 Fifty-six lines quickly trace And a will fill this space. Draw from one to two and eo on , to the end. "Outwitting By Lieutenant Pat O'Brien (Copyright, 1918, by Pat Alva O'Brien.) i 1 " ut to re,urn to | | ij up I returned to the . #?':.J consulate and ar if 1 R v 1 made for my trans-; fe portation to Kng- \ land at once. Kor-1 tunately there was a ; very night and I was allowed to take pas i sage on it. Just as we were leaving Rotter i dam, the boat I was on rammed our j own convoy, one of the destroyers, j.aijd injured it so badly that it had to put back to port. It would have been i a strange climax to my adventure if | the disaster had resulted in the sink j ing of my boat and I had lost my life [while on my way to England after ' naving successfully outwitting the I Huns. * But my luck was with me to the | last, and while the accident resulted i in some delay our boat was not se riously damaged and made the trip over in schedule time and without further incident, another destroyer I having been assigned to escort us through the danger zone in place of the one which we had put out of commission. i When I arrived in London the re action from the strain I had been un der for nearly three months imme diately became apparent. My nerves were in such a state that it was ab solutely impossible for me to cross the street without being in deadly fear of being run over or trampled on. I stood at the curb, like an old woman from the country on her first visit to the city and I would not ven ture across until some knowing po liceman, recognizing my condition, came to my assistance and convoyed me across. . Indeed, there is a great number of English officers at home at all times "getting back their nerves" after a long spell of active service at the front, so that my condition was any thing but novel to the London bob bies. It was not many days, however, before I regained control of myself and felt in first-class shape. Sends a Cable th Mother , Although the British* authorities in Holland had wired my mother from Holland that I was safe and on my way to England, the first thing I did when we landed was to send her a cable myself. The cable read as follows; "Mrs. M. J. O'Brien, Momence, 111., U. S. A.: "Just escaped from Germany. Let ter follows." As I delivered it to the cable dis patcher I could just imagine the ex ultation with which my mother would receive it and the pride she would feel as she exhibited it among her neighbors and friends. I could hear the volley of "I told you so's" that greeted her good tid ings. "It would take more than the Kaiser to kep Pat in Germany," I could hear one of them saying. "Knew he'd be back for Christmas anyway," I could hear another re mark. "I had an Idea that Pat and his comrades might spend Christmas in Berlin," I could hear another admit ting, "but I didn't think any other part of Germany would appeal to him very much." "Mrs. O'Brien, did Pat write you how many German prisoners he brought back with him?" I could hear still another credulous friend inquiring. It was all very amusing and grati fying to me and I must confess I felt quite cocky as I walked into the War Department to report. For the next five days I was kept very busy answering questions put to me by the military authorities regarding what I had observed as to conditions in Germany and behind the lines. What I reported was taken down by a stenographer and made part of the official records, but I didn't give them my story in narrative form. The information I was able to give was naturally of interest to var ious branches of the service, and experts in every line of government work took it in turns to question me. One morning would be devoted, for instance, to answering questions of NO ADVANCE IN PRICE MEURALGIA JL For quick results rub the Forehead fctirffa _ fa and Temples with fep! mt 25c—50c—$1.00 i i , ———— UNDERTAKER Tr** Chas. H. Mauk "both 1 PRIVATE AMBULANCE PHONES a military nature German methods behind the front line trenches, tac tics, morale of troops and similar matters. Then the aviation experts would take a whack at me and dis cuss with me all 1 had observed of German flying corps methods and j equipment. I Then, again, the food experts I would interrogate me as to what 1 I had learned of food conditions in I Germany, Luxembourg and Belgium, jond as I had lived pretty close to I the ground for the best part of sev enty-two days 1 was able to give them some fairly accurate reports . as to actual agricultural conditions, | many of the things I told them prob ably having more significance •to II them than they had to me. \ * There wer many things I had ob served which I have not referred to in these pages because their value ! to us might be diminished if the Germans knew we were aware of 1 them, but they were all reported to the authorities, and it was very | gratifying to me to hear that the experts considered some of them of the greatest value. One of the most amusing incidents ; of my return occurred when I called , at my bankers in to get my > personal effects. The practice in the Royal Flying Corps when a pilot is reported miss ing is to have two of . his comrades assigned to go through his belong ings, check them over, destroy any i thing that it might not be to his in terest to preserve and send the i whole business to his banker or his ! home, as the case may be. Every letter is read through, but their contents is never afterward discussed or revealed in any way. If the pilot is finally reported dead his effects are forwarded to his next of kin, but while he is officially only , "missing" or is known to be a pris oner of war they are kept either at the squadron headquarters or sent ' to his bankers. i In my case, as soon as it was learned that I had fallen from the sky, it was assumed that I had been i killed, and my chum, Paul Raney, and another officer were detailed to check over my effects. The list they made and to which they affixed their signatures, as I have previous ly mentioned, is now in my posses- I Market Street i jkM '' e °^ High-Class Leghorn Hats H / y '\ An entire New Showing of French models and others I \\ /) \ —never shown before—Every Hat represents the last □ I V/ minute ideas in Summer Millinery. You will find our prices so very much lower that you □ \J will wonder how we do it. j W SEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY ° of these exquisite Dressy Hats I Leghorn hats come from Italy; had we waited until now to buy them, our price would be ' at least 40 per cent, higher. As usual, we got there early. When the streets of Harrisburg were covered with moun □ tains of snow and ice—we placed our orders and to-day you buy Leghorn Hats HERE at less | than to-day's importation prices—and our assortment is enormous. □ • No half-way doing things in this store. sion .and is one of the most treas ured souvenirs of my adventure. My trunk was sent to Cox & Co. in due course, and now that I was in London, I thought 1 would go and claim it. ' When I arrived in the bank I ap plied at the proper window for my mail and trunk. "Who are you?" I was asked, rather sharply. "Well, I guess no one has any greater right to Pat O'Brien's effects than I have," I replied, "and I would be obliged to you if you would look them up for me." Demands Proof He Is Dead "That may be all light, my friend," replied the clerk, "but according to our records Lieutenant O'Brien is a prisoner of war in Gernfhny, and we can't very well turn over his effects to any one else unless either you pre sent proof that he is dead and that How to Make Oatmeal Bread Healthful to Eat —Saves the Wheat 1 cup flour 1 cap cooked oatmeal or rolled IJj cup* corn meal oati 1 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons shortening S teaspoons Royal Balring Powder 1V cups milk * 2 tablespoons sugar No eggs Sift together flour, com meal, salt, baking powder and sugar. Add oatmeal, melted shortening and milk. Bake in gTeased •hallow pan in moderate oven 40 to 43 minutes. This wholesome bread is easily and quickly made with the aid of ROYAL BAKING POWDER If used three times a week in place of white bread by the 22 million families in the United States, it would save more than 900,000 barrels of flour a month. Our new Red, White and Blue booklet. "Best War Time Recipes containing many other recipes for making delicious and wholesome wheat saving foods, mailed free—address ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO, Dept. H, 135 William St. New York FOOD WILL WIN THE WAR you are his lawful representative, or else deliver to. us a properly authen ticated order from him to give them to you." He was very positive about It all, but quite polite, and I thought 1 would kid him no more. "Well," I said, "X can't very well present proofs to you that Pat O'Brien is dead, but I will do the best I can to prove to you that he is alive, and if you haven't quite forgotten his signature I guess I can write you an order that will answer all your requirements and enable you to give me Pat O'Brien's belongings without running any risks," and I scribbled my signature on a piece of paper and handed it to him. He looked at me carefully through the latticed window, then jumped down from his high chair and came outside to clasp me by the hand. (To Be Continued.) 5 BII.L AUTHORIZING 1020 CBNBVS 18 INTRODUCES! WnnhlnKton, May 22.—A bill all' thorizlng the fourteenth census it 1920 and appropriating *18,000,000 t< defray costs was favorably reportet to the House yesterday afternoon bj the Census Committee. It is estimat ed that upwards of 100,000 enumera tors, clerks, etc., will be needed fQi the inquiry, which is to be made a: to population, farm products, manu factures and mines and quarries. ARMY OFFICERS PALLBEARERS New York, May 22.—Army officers representing the United States ant each of the .Allies, served yesterdaj as pallbearers at the funeral in St Patrick's Cathedral of Captain An tonio Silvio Resnati, the famoui Italian aviator, who fell to his deatt at Mineola last week.