How to Conserve Canning and Packing For Win tor's Use Explained In Petail by National War Garden Experts PROCESSING "Processing" is the final applica tion of heat to sterilize the products which packed in sealed Jars. Processing is done in boiling water, steam or steam under pressure, and continued for a period determined by the character of the product and the kind of apparatus used. The time is longer when boiling water is used. Under steam pressure, harm ful organisms are destroyed in a much shorter time because of the high temperature. The National War Garden Commission, Washing ton, will mail to you a free canning manual upon request, for a 2-cent stamp to cover postage. Before starting actual canning work everything needed should be at hand and in order. If using the hot water bath outfit, have the boiler on the stove one-half to three-quar ters of an hour before it will be re quired. In it there should be an open false bottom, raised one Inch, and the amount of water needed should be poured in and heated. The jars should be placed in the processing vessel as soon as filled. The hot water bath should be really hot and at the boiling point when the first jar is put in. By the time the last jar enters the water should be nearly back to the boiling point! again. Avoid putting jars into cold or warm water after filling them, and letting them stand in the bath! while the water is getting hot. The water should be one inch over the top of the jars. Note the time when the water be gins to boil and keep it boiling con tinuously during the full period, then 1 remove the jars at once. If the ster ilizer cover does not fit snugly, place a towel over the top of boiler or bucket and press the cover down over it. If the processing is done in a steam pressure outfit, put water in the bottom of the canner according to directions, set the jars in place and adjust the lid. Clamp this on I and close the pet cock. When the steam gage registers the right pres sure, notice the time and keep the; temperature even during the pro-' cessing period. When this is over,' PERFECT WOMANHOOD^ Perfect womanhood depends on j perfect health. Beauty and a good | disposition both vanish before pain i find suffering. A great menace to a woman's happiness in life is the suf- | fering that comes from some func tional derangement which soon de-1 velops headaches, backache, nerv-j ousness and "the blues." For such I suffering, women find help in that tamous old root and herb remedy,! Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-i pound, which for three generations j has been restoring health 'to women I >f America. |H Much Good Food is Spoiled H Eg in the Cooking H HI Mazola—the Oil for Cooking and Salads- Turns the Ordinary Meal Into a TF you would have light, flaky pastries, crisp and easily J. digested fried potatoes, fish, crullers and doughnuts, use 111 Mazola for deep frying, saut&ng, Shortening. Mazola opens up a new field of cooking for the thrifty B Coming from a wholesome, edible source (Indian Corn) And since it does not burn as easily as butter, lard or suet, there is not nearly so much danger of spoiling the foods m More economical, too, as it does not carry the odor or flavor HI of one food to another—can be used over and over again. Mazola also has a delicacy of flavor which improves salad dressings. You will find it easier to mix than olive oil, too. For sale in pints, quarts, half gallons and gallons. For greater economy buy the large sizes. HI There is a valuable Cook Book for Mazola users! It shows you how to fry, saute, make dressings and sauces more delicious, make light, digestible pastry. Should M be in every home. Send for it or ask your grocer. FREE* CORN PRODUCTS REFINING COMPANY j Box 161, New \ ork Jk ijL Smiling Rmprmamniatio* / / 135 South 2nd Street. Philadelphia, Pa, I uL 2 eops reached potatoes 'tflf VMVm WvV, ~ 2 cape flour gy BABBAa 1 tablespoon Maxola M r>J Wrt 4 teupoon ta.t Li j JK bM U&L Milk Mix floor, potato**, Mazola Bf| M M w ■ H and Bslt, and add milk enough Kfjl - -- iw afl ■ ■ S"S W to make batter aa for griddle ml jL KKh SB - W fl H mm B W I cakes. Dissolve 4 yeast caka ■) jB IKi^Hßj^W rn 1 W * mm mm v \ — r, in l A eop luke-warm waUr and BMC Qht ' I M ■ mM 11 V %=; stir in. Bet tJO rise. When light I ■" / mm MB El A V=2 * dd *+ te " poon aoda dissolved m~LL ■BBfIBBBA I | |WI II B I II ■ P In tablespoon warm water. BV WEDNESDAY EVENING, Bringing Up Father .*■%* Copyright, 1918, International News Service By McManu ' 1 If \ — 11 ———l r 1 —t <EE! '0 LIKE TO Co TO VM -THE / AM > <OU tEE DONT TO OVE ©f GOLLX •NO SOONER I WHERE DOE OINTYb feUT ME V/IFE WOtsY LET J '- 7 WIFE.- } J ME- J b=T_ -2 f... / OTNXV MOORE - "YOOR ALL THAT CHINA —OUT - a NVE'LL MCCT~AT' ** WIFE. WITH S ? wait until the gage registers zero before opening the pet cock and un fasten the cover. All jars should have their seals j made tight at once when removed from canner. Keep accurately both time and required temperatures, and! thus avoid failures. The commission will gladly answer any questions written "on one side of the paper and sent in a self-addressed stamped en-1 velope. Loysville Orphans Band to Give Park Concert The Loysville Orphan band will give 1 concerts to-morrow afternoon and j evening at Reservoir Park, it was an nounced by officials of the City Park Department. The Lutherar Brother hood. of the city and nearby towns, will meet for an annual reunion at the park to-morrow. The Loysville band, a fifty-five-piece organization, direct- ! ed by Claude M. Stouffer, has been He- : cured to furnish music for the day. ' and has volunteered its services for j the concerts. Various games and other sports will be enjoyed in the ! morning. Definite arrangements for concerts' in Reservoir Park on July 4 have not j been completed, V. Grant Forrer. as- | sistant park superintendent, announc ed. Programs will be arranged as soon as a band has been selected, he said. POLICE RECOVKR MICH The report of the police depart- | ment for the first six months of the ! year show that out of stolen articles t valued at SiJ,BS6, all but $528.50 i worth have been recovered. Two au- I tomobiles valued at $325 each were t among the unrecovered articles. I There were 1.107 arrests and 589 pa-' trol calls. THE PLOTTERS A New Serial of East and West By Virginia Tfrliiiiie Van de Water (Copyright, 1918, by Star Co.) I CHAPTER IV. DOUGLAS WADE slept little during the night following his t&lk with John Butler. Early in the morning a messenger I brought him a note that Butler had written before retiring, thus setting at defiance the rules of the "Rest Cure. " "The more I think of that job on j | the farm the more I want to tackle j i it," the note ran. "I'll tell mother ! j of it the first thing in the morning.: j I don't want any pay for my work. j The experience is what I'm after. 1 It's a chance to practice the study [l've specialized on. If mother will] plead, as usual, my ill health, try to i f talk her around. I know I'm a dis-i j gusting invalid, but I'm not a dead one—yet." Dr. Wade had intended to call j upon Mrs. Bulter today, but the j lady herself appeared at his office I soon after 10.30. ! "I waited until your office hours ; were over." she announced. "Are ' your patients all gone." Wade restrained a wild inclina ! tion to laugh. "I see no patients 1 here after ten-thirty," he said. "Can you give me a few moments 1 before going out on your calls?"! the widow asked. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH ! "I shall not go out before eleven | o'clock," he replied. "Well—l want to ask you about ■ this crazy notion that John has now of working on a farm you men tioned. Tell me what it is all about. D.ouglas had anticipated this de mand, and in the silent midnight • watches had thought out his re joinder. Gently and tactfully, he explained ! the situation, prefacing the explana- I tion by the statement that he had 1 1 specialized in nervousness diseases : at a famous French university, so ! was more than casually interested !in John Butler's case. What John ! needed was complete change of I scene and thought, an abundance of | outdoor work and an absorbing in ! terest. Would Mrs. Wade trust her t son to the care of a man of whom she knew very little? All the way through the conver sation the young physician was careful not to suggest that a large part of ,the patient's troubles were due to too assiduous maternal at tention. Yet he did intimate that John would be better off "where he could not turn to his mother with every complaint." She Finally Consents Mrs. Wade listened eagerly to Wade's proposal that the invalid be allowed to spend the Summer on the Wade farm in New Hampshire. When at last she spoke her voice trembled. "I dread to send my boy from me," she said, "and yet I have taken him to so many physicians and have done so many things for him—and all in vain—that I am at my wits' end. It does seem cruel that a woman with as much money as I have cannot save her only son from what threatens to be a complete and permanent breakdown." "You can save him from that, I really believe," her companion re assured her. Will you trust him to me?" She arose impulsively, and the man rose, too. Holding out both hands to him, she looked straight into his honest eyes. "Dr. Wade, if you can save my fooy, if you can prevent his becom ing the wreck that I dread, I will pay you any sum you name, and will always be your friend." Douglas Wade smiled down at her kindly. "X will do my best," he promised, "and we will not talk of money until we see the result of my efforts. But I must ask you to leave your boy completely to me and not interfere, even if you think I am permitting him to bury his genius in the wilds of New England." "Oh, I will promise anything you ask," she said. "But it is very hard ■on me." "I know it," the man sympathized But the game is worth the candle." During his solitary office-hours that afternoon. Douglas Wade wrote a long letter to his sister. He reminded her that she had expressed the wish that she could j do something anything to help him. He was about to give her an opportunity to prove the' sincerity of that wish. She had told him she had a talent for dramatics. Then she must act a part for him and follow the instructions which he would now give her—although to do this would mean much thought and not a little tact. Many Directions Then there came several pages of large letter paper filled with di rections as to the course she was to pursue. The writer went into full particulars on the nervous con dition of his patient, and on the pro posed plan of curative treatment. "X must have a clever and inter ested person on the ground to see that my ofders are carried out," he explained. "Will you do all that I ask? Let Chapln and his wife know that Butler is a farming expert.— that is all. You can say that he has not been well, and is combin ing business and recreation by spending the summer on my farm. Make them understand that you do not wish your identity known to this man. Let them think that I am paying him for his valuable ad vice and assistance. Telegraph me at once and tell me if you under stand my scheme and if you agree. to it." A special delivery stamp was put on the letter, and Douglas Wade sallied forth at sunset to mail it. For the next three days he found it hard to conceal his nervousness. \ When at last his sister's telegram j arrived, his hands trembled as he \ opened it. "Will do what you direct," he j read. "Thanks for chance. Am i writing." The man laughed tremulously as he re-read the message. "Just ten words!" he exclaimed approvingly, "Even in her excitement, Eliza beth is business-like and econom ical. Between us, we'll see this thing through." Three days later her letter came, approving of his action and prom ising her hearty co-operation. By the time the letter had ar rived, John Butler's plans for de-' parture from Riverhill were com-, pleted, and he was ready to takei the next train to the £ast and to! the New Hampshire farm. To Be Continued. FASHION'S FORECAST (By Annabel Worthlngton) V ) Th,,, comfortable bathrobe for the man Iw / VC\ ° f the ho " se m,ir be n " lde ° f * robe b,an ' / \ / J \ I \ kH mMsnrin "by 80 Inches, or if pre / \ '.I. 1\ ferred, terry cloth or Japanese cotton / J / /VI \ crPpe will be more satisfactory for the /trA !/ I I WRrm weather ' Tl,e rob e is doublo ) breaßted and the fronts may he rolled b " Ck t0 form reTerps ' or buttoned hijrh \j (. Wlth the Collar rol,pd over - fls shown in jaLTHN * tbe Smnl ' Vi * W ' Tl,ere ,s Rn inT " Prte<l uir Htni|iiiiii plait at the centre back to (fire extra fill ip A SHS * nww - The robe is held in place by a cord U | I | - jpirdle. ConTeniently larj-e pockets of the | | material are stitched nt the \ J ifl The man's bathrobe pattern \o. SS.'O V i I I / I /( \ 81,4 ,n tl ' pc * 4ft and 44 inches 1 S / n II i\ V tSpMSt m easnre. Made of material the \ | I [if TT/ frrjj 1 incb * i,!P re *l" i,es B yards 30 inch, or \ I II yards 54 inch, or any rize requires w Sr2S* -JKi.iiS n one blanket 72 by 80 inches. Price ** 0 || * entt " r r^~-^ 8850 AMX fes This pattern will be mailed to any address upon receipt of 12 cents in stamp*. Address your letter to Fashion Department, Telegraph Har risburg, Pa. ' What Are You Doing About It? If a.list were made of all those in Europe who have died in action and another of those who have died from starvation, the latter would be the longer. Think of it! 500,000 more have died from famine than have died on the battlefield. The total number of those who have been killed in fighting is 4,250,000. The total num ber of those who have died from starvation is 4,750,000. Can we grasp the tragedy in these figures? Over four and a half million of old men and women, young mothers, girls and boys nnd babies, have been sacrificed to the War-God without even the privilege of leaving behind the honqred memory of those who die in glorious service on the battle field. They have died in silent anguish, unknown and unsung. Perhaps the memory of their deaths would not forever fill us with horror if we could convince our selves that those who have died from starvation have not died in vain, that by their sacrifice they have pushed the Allies a little nearer victory. The loss of these lives will have been appallingly useless unless their deaths shall serve as a spur for us to redouble our efforts in food conservation and save the remain ing millions in Europe who turn to us each day, pleading, "Give us this day our daily bread." What are you doing to prevent the further sacrifice of human lives from star\ation? Are you: (1) Going wheatless until the next harvest? YOU can easily keep it aa odorless' and sanitary as a cooking dish with a little UME Sprinkled in empty can and on garbage it disinfects and de odorizes and prevents the breeding of diseaae germs. A.i mil good /roan mnd druggiatm 15 tula The Mendleson Corporation k Hw York City j (2) Raising and planting to can enough vegetables and fruit for your own needs this summer and next winter? (3) Reducing your con sumption of sugar to a minimum by using honey and syrups wheViever possible? (4) Making the smallest STORE OPENS 8:30 A. M CLOSES 5:30 !'. M. H/H/H/n TOMORROW, THURSDAY | The First Half-Holiday of the Season jb Our Store Closes 12 O'clock Noon 1 . DO YOUR SHOPPING IN THE MORNING We Have Assembled a Number of Excellent Values to Make Early Shopping Worth While £ 11 REMEMBER—Store Closes Thursdays at 12 Noon [ —-—ANNOUNCEMENT 1 Read This Paper Tomorrow For Our Wonderful Sale Of Beautiful Summer Shirtwaists 1 and Smart Wash Skirts | Sale Will Start Friday Next Full Particulars in This Paper Tomorrow STORE OPENS 8:30 A. M. —CLOSES 5:30 P. JUNE 26. 1918. Daily Dot Puzzles j s M 8 12. • it , 0 3 14 '5 .3 • • : 6 * • 3* . *r 32 3o • '* 33 *9* 18* 2a 19* 2T *l° lb * '* How old am I? Draw from one to two and so on to the end. amounts of meat and fats go the longest way? (5) Preaching and practicing food conservation when ever possible? ENSIGN ENCOUNTERS STORM Ensign Leroy E. Sipucker. son of the Rev. Dr. Clayton Smucker, 1311 Vernon street, recently had the thrill ing experience of being in charge of a submarine chaser during a tive days' storm in European waters. He had previously been in charge of the 1 vessel in the journey across the At lantic. 5 UPPER END DRAFTEES PASS THROUGH CITY Seventeen drafties, sent out by County Draft Board No. 3, at Eliza bethville, arrived safely at Camp Lee, Petersburg, Va.. this morning. The men left Elizabethvllle yesterday afternoon and took their supper in Harrisburg. They had originally been scheduled to leave for camp with the 246 Harrisburg men on Monday. Just One Application and the Hairs Vanish (Toilet Talks) Any woman can keep her skin free from unsightly hair or fuzz if she will follow these simple instruc tions. When hairy growths appear, •apply a simple paste, made by mix ing some water with powdered dela tone. Apply this to hairy surface and after 1! or 3 minutes rub off, . wash the skin and the hairs are gone. This is a harmless treatment, but bo sure you get the real dela tone. After Taking TonaU He Feels Similar to the Name of the Town in Which He Lives, SPRY "My general constitution was run down to such an extent that 1 could not rest, due to stomach trouble and asthma," says W. S. Burns, of tspry It. F. D. No. 6, York, Pa. "I was growing weaker every day, and . I was so short of breath and my heart would palpitate dreadfully *> after the least exertion. I was no nervous and what little I did eat did not appear to give me any strength. "I had tried several different kinds of medicine, but found no re lief until I began to take Tonall. ' which was recommended to me. I tell you TonaU has done wonders for me. I am now taking the third bot tle and I feel so much relieved. My nerves are in good shape and the palpitation of my heart does not bother me like it -did, and I am not so short of breath, either. I can eat 4 well and sleep soundly and in every respect I feel like a different per son. I can certainly recommend Tonall. The above testimonial was given 4 April 17, 1918. Tonall is sold at Gorgas' Drug Store, Harrisburg and Hershey Drug Store, Hershey.
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