Three Meals With out Any Wheat Flour 1 Why vcs. everybody is having, meals without any wheat flour. Don't get behind In the procession. Keep up to date. Here's how the United States Food Administration says it! No yeast bread—lnstead of it-1 quickbreads made of cornmeal, corn i flour, rice flour, oatmeal, barley, or l other substitutes which you have in| your locality. Potatoes, fice hominy. No macaroni, spaghetti or other, wheat pastes—substitute hominy. i Thicken gravies and sauces with : rice flour, corn flour, corn starch, i Use breakfast foods made of corn, oats, rice, barley—none with any wheat flour in them Oakes made of barley, rice flour,: corn flour, potato flour. Desserts of oatmeal, barley, potato : flour, tapioca, gelatin, milk, fruit. Breakfast Corn flakes with sliced bananas, eggs, hashed brown potatoes, oatmeal, muffins, jelly. launch Rice with cheese sauce, cucumber and radish salad with French dress- j ing. fruit, barley hermit cakes. Dinner Tomato soup, roast beef, escallopcd j potatoes, spinach, ripe olives, £r;\pei juice gelatin, wheatless wafers (corn- ; meal or oatmeal). Outincal Muffins 1 cups tine granulated oatmeal. 4 teaspoon? baking powder, teaspoon salt 1 cup milk. 1 tablespoon fat. 3 tablespoons corn sirup. 1 egg. Sift dry materials together. Add to the cup of milk the molted fat,: sirup and beaten egg Combine these' What the Vim Delivery Cap Can Eg "I?VERY progressive storekeeper is willing to grant that Smjft -E/ customers are harder to satisfy today than they were I#'"© ten years ago. Speed "op" is th# word these days. Speed Qf w up in delivery— more than anything else. The Vim Delivery Car will deliver to more I aistoners at from 50 to 200 per cent less cost ■]■ / [A than any other form of delivery—makeshift Hufl 141 converted passenger car or horse and wagon. | fca The Vim is built like a track with a truck 11 n motor and extra strong construction from Mb ,■fij radiator to rear axle. No pleasure car parts, no makeshift attachments. f The chassis stlis for UiS. CompUts with Open mgm pR| ij Express body tflS: tcith CZo+ed Panel body S9SS. HE Ms ■ Fourteen standard types of body. All prices ggMEff n F. O. B. Philadelphia. Vi L. SoeniT land at their prices. for the Qlher g uiu at sls> slß _ S3O 545 Military Shop—lst Floor THE GL THURSDAY EVENING, two mixtures, stirring lightly without beating. Bake about thirty minutes in a moderately hot oven. Barley Hermit Cakes 14 cup fat. ?4 cup sugar. 1 egg. 2 tablespoons milk. 2 cups barley flour. 2 teaspoons baking powder, j 1-3 cup chopped raisins. H cup chopped nuts, teaspoon cinnamon. >4 teaspoon cloves. Combine the ingredients as for j cake, add enough barley flour to make a dough stiff enough to lie : rolled. Roll thin, shape wtth small cookie cutter and bake on tin sheets. Wharton School to Hold j Its Ctmmencement June 11 Commencement events of the Senior class of the local extension of the j University of Pennsylvania Wharton i School will open on Thursday even ing. June 6. and will close with 4 the ! commencement proper on Tuesday, June 11. Nine students will be gradu ; ated this year, many other members of the class having enlisted in the United States service. The graduates ■ include: T. J. Bard. L Ira Cargill, Lee M. Hale, James Keane. Lawrence Och. John 2ook, \V. H. Dimmick, C. E. Fox I and G. R. Neff. | The annual banquet, tendered by i the Juniors to the Seniors, will open ! the festivities on Thursday evening. June fi. This event will be held at 1 the Elks' Home. L D. Cohen Is chair man of the committee on arrange ments. The baccalaureate sermon will be delivered in the Fourth Street Church of God on Sunday evening. June 9. by the pastor, the Rev. W. N. Yates. Pean William McClellan. of the Wharton School at Philadelphia, will : likely be one of the speakers at the , commencement events on Tuesday evening. June 11. in the Technical High School Auditorium. Senior examinations are now being given. On Monday. May 27. the final j examinations for the Freshmen will 1 start. Irish Countess in Jail / v'-v-'i . V 'J ' ; > . ) a " ■ • ' ''' 1 ' <- •V * ' . ... ~ ... .v ~ <>■ . > - v >\ .. . ,■• • ■ - V •>•••- -V-* jfj '? •'• ' ■ •* ~. "v X' U " - z- •• -. •*"' ■ .*.. i- ** - ... v , ST* • -VJ| CCWTCSS COWANCC MAZK/£YJCZ' Countess Markievicz, with many other Irish and Sinn Fein leaders, was arrested by the British in con nection with a German plot. She was convicted after the abortive Irish re bellion two years ago and sentenced to be shot, but was later pardoned. Italians to March in Big Patriotic Demonstration Every Italian lodge in Harrisburg I will have men in line in the big pa -1 rade to celebrate the third anniver sary of Italy's entrance into the war to be held to-morrow evening. Five I hundred persons, including Mayor Keister and other city officials, are expected to be in line. While the pa rade will be made up largely of Ital ians. any persons of allied sympathies is invited to participate. | Joseph J. Parialo will be the chief j marshal of the parade, which will ; move off from Front and Msrki streets at 7:30 o'clock. Moving from i Market, the procession will move to ! Fourth, to Walnut, to Third, to Reilv , to Second, to North, to Front, to Mar ket t-quare. Several bands, including that of the Sons of Italy and of Me j chanicsburg, will be in line. MANY Brr THRIFT STAMPS* Harrisburg workers are not letting ' U P 'n their efforts to boost the sales °f War Savings Stamps this week ; after the rush of "pledge week," which j ended last Saturday. Committees are i endeavoring this week to visit as , many stores in Harrisburg as possible J with '.he idea of influencing their owners to handle the stamps along with their other goods.' HAIUUBBURaMiITkXEGIIXra WHEAT CROP MAY BE VERY SHORT State Reports Do Not Indicate Good Condition in the Southeastern Counties May reports of i \ \ JJ~) the crop corres \\\ \-4//. pondetfts of tte wWAft/ State Department S of Agriculture show that the jg: yffif condition of wheat in the state 11 MSfiWHWW HS coni P are< t with an averaKe is S3 Department's bulletin says, this is four points lower thaji at the same time a year ago and indicates that the yield will be about 15.2 bushels to the acre or a total pro duction of approximately 22,000,- 000 bushels. The one discouraging feature of the wheat situation is that in the big producing counties the prospects aje usually discourag ing. Lancaster shows about 70 per cent, while Chester condition of 68 per cent.: Berks, 81 per cent.; Dela ware, 70 per cent, and Bucks 81 per cent. "The condition of rye compared with an average is 87.5 per cent. This indicates that the yield per acre will be 15.2 bushels and the total yield little more than 4,000,- 000 bushels which is half a million bushels less than last year. "It is estimated that there are 7,653 acres sown to barley in the state with Center county leading and Tioga second. Clover and timothy are in splendid condition. '"Therp has been an Improvement in the prospects for a peach crop and it is now estimated that the peax-h crop will be between 65 and 70 percent, of a normal crop. With the setting of the peach buds the conditions were considerably bright ened. Indications point to a good apple crop." No Standard Yet.—Tn refusing a rehearing in the complaint of Harry W. Fyrne. relative to/the deposit and interest system of the Fayette County Gas Compa.ny. Chairman W. R. D. Ainey, of the Public Service Commission, says that the commis sion does not deem it expedient to promulgate a rule to fix a standard applicable to all with the possibility of creating conditions more objec tionable than at present. It is stated that later on a state-wide standard "of benefit to rate payers and utilities" will be worked out. The opinion reviews results of con ferences with utility managers on the subject and says that systems must be reasonable. May Enter Militia—Apeparance here to-day of Charles B. Smith and George Farnum. of Philadelphia, in company with General C. T. Cress well. commandant of the Reserve Militia, caused' rumors that they might named to places in the new military establishment. The Gover nor had a consultation with Adju tant General Beary to-day about, completing the organization of the Guard in which some high places have never been filled. General Cresswell was here about the in struction camp plans. First Taken 111 —Lester First, of this city, messenger in the state de partment, who returned from his wedding trip a few days ago, was operated on last night for appendi citis. He is improving to-day. Johnson Winner —Charles John son, deputy auditor general, was con gratulated to-day by friends at the capitol on his sweeping victory in Montgomery county, which was" one of the storm centers in the state. Sir. Johnson's friends won all along the line, Representative James S. Boyd, of Xorristown, defeating Charles A. Ambler for senatorial nomination by 3,000. Jersey Shore Case>—Counsel Evans of the Public Service Commission, held a hearing to-day on the valua tion of the Jersey Shore Water Com pany, a continued case. Few hear ings were held to-day. Increases Made—The Public Serv ice Commission tp-day announced that the Philadelphia Suburban Gas and Electric Company had filed notice increasing price of gas twenty cents a thousand feet in Pottstown, Phoenixville and other places, to take efTect June 10. The South Pennsylvania Traction Company, filed notice of increase from five to six cents of fares within the city of Chester and on suburban zones and frffm 12 to H cents from Ches ter to tlfe Sixty-ninth street ter minal, Philadelphia, effective June 14. The Carbon Transit, Beaver Valley Traction, Cleveland and Erie j Railway, and Northwestern Pennsyl vania Railway companies also gave notice of increases for passengers or power. Civil Right Bill —Attorney General' Brown is sending copies of the fed eral civil rights bill, designed to ! protect soldiers while they are at I war to 7500 justices of the peace and will send copies to constables. The 1 act has been sent to all judges by Mr. Brown with a letter calling at tention to its importance. State Is Supremo—The Public Service Commission is declared by Attorney General Brown to have the power to "legally authorize a street railway company to increase a rate of fare, notwithstanding the fact that the rate was specified by local authorities ag a condition upon which they hav£ their consent to the com pany to construct its lines within the municipal iimits." This decision was given to Chairman Ainey and will : have an important bearing as con | tentions have been made during liti gation over increases of fares by street railway companies that the commission was without jurisdiction where a franchise ordinance speci fies the fare. It was given in the case of the borough of Wilktnsburg which had passed an ordninance in 1899 specifying a three cent far 6 within its tfmits. The attorney gen eral gives an exhaustive opinion in which,he holds that the Legislature has the power to create a body to change rates fixed by local author ities. The decision will govern in perhaps twenty cases now pending before the commission. Dr. Kalbfu* Better. —Dr. Joseph Kalbfus, secretary of the State Game Commission, who has been 111, is im proving. To Open Mid*. —The bids for the state highway bridge over Jack's creek in Derry township, Mifflin county, will be opened June 13. Mr. Newman Here, —J. B. Newman, Illinois Health Commissioner, was here yesterday to see Commissioner James Foust. At St. I.aula. —Commissioner of Banking Daniel F. Lafean Is at St. Louis, attending the national bank ing commissioners' convention. No Smallpox.—The outbreak of sickness at Blossburg, which It va> I feared would be smallpox, has been' officially reported as something else. J Registration Orders.—State draft I headquarters has called on all local I draft boards in Pennsylvania to state at once whether they are prepared I i , * gS "The Live Store" "Always Reliable" Ddn t F<^ Don t F ° r S et | I Are The Best Known I Everywhere "Manhattan Shirts" are knov; n as the best and what we are trying to do at this "Live Store" more than anything else is to have the things most people I want, Manhattan Shirts were never more popular than they are to day Our huge stocks testify to the faith we have in them Our liberal guarantee goes with them, as well as with every article we sell I which brings those who want standardized goods to Doutrichs, where they are never disappointed. 1 I Beautiful Silk and Fibre Shirts I Crepe de Chine, Madras and Percale in exceptional colorings of ■ unsurpassed beauty. |j I $2.00 to SIO.OO | I The "Aviator" —Soft Silk Collars I 3 for SI.OO Biggest Hit of the Season 1 Our Boys' j I I W&SSmMm, Department \ u * 8 alwa Y s in the march of progress ' ' y rMLX? moving forward with the better 1 , i firn grade merchandise, making - this i 1 Tl "Live Store" the favored spot for 1 I /l boys and the "kiddies" where they jl | always find the best Suits, Hats and I Hart Schaffner o Kuppenheimer & Marx Clothes Try The Dependable Doutrich Service 304 Market Street Harrisburg, Pa. Ito proceed with the registration on I J June 5 of men who have become 21 J i since the last registration. This in- | I formation must reach th e state head quarters not later than May 25, sol | that there will be no delay in the! I work, local boards are notified also! I that the chief clerk or uny member I MAY 23, 1918. lof a board la authorised to record | answers of "persons absent from the> ( jurisdiction of their respective lock! | I boards and to certify to their regls | tration carda." Boards within whose j Jurisdiction are shipyards, munition ! plants and other Industries are di- I rected to arrange to care for men in 11 war industries who have to be reg istered and who are temporarily away from home, while the same is to be done by boards in whose dis tricts are prisons. Forms for regis tration of prisoners who may have reached 21 in the laat year are "to be sent to wardens.