8 HOUSEHOLD TALKS Henrietta D. Grauel How to Use the Daily Menu Dear Miss Grauel: In your holiday menus you left out onions. 1 consider this the most im portant vegetable, aside from potatoes and squash. Many will eat onions on holidays that will not at an.v other time, for obvious reasons. Yours, H. .1. R. No single menu or a group of menus can be compiled to suit everyone. They are only meant for suggestions; only a partial answer to that ever re furring question—What shall I have for diunerf Most housekeepers tin not study food values or give any thought to correct combinations of foods but rely upon that usually safe guide, the normal ap petite. Whether onions, squash and potatoes are included in any dinner or not, does not reflect upon the worth of these excellent vegetables. There are just as obvious reasons for not eating onions on holidays as there are argu ments for serving them. The salad question is another thing that calls forth criticism constantly. Salads are wholesome and a weil planned dinner should always contain one, but there are families and families who never have learned to eat them. Salads are healthful but not popular. So when greens, like spinach, dande lions or beet tops, or even asparagus are in the day's list of food, salads are omitted. Mlf your taste demands all Havana qual ity smoke OMo/a 10c Cigars There are 50 years of "know how" back of this brand, and they are the - richest, most fragrant and satisfying I cigars a dime can buy. Made by A John C. Herma !If You Are Looking! For a Pure Beer— % % % Made of the finest Malt ami Hops—Sparkling Fil- | ❖ tered ater—and Purest Yeast—bv the best Sani- I I tary Methods. Order DOEHNE Beer. 1 •> $ ! DOEHNE BREWERY j Beil L Independent :518 * <• A .J .j, .J. .J, .j,.j,.................................... ,j............... .., LANCASTER TOBACCO MARKET Favorable Weather Responsible for J Stripping of New Crop Lam-aster, Dec. 28. Favorable weather during the past week was re sponsible for the general stripping of j Lancaster county's new tobacco crop,; a large percentage of which has now I been stripped. The growers claim it is the best crop grown within a quarter of a century. A notable feature is the difference in prices. Twenty-five years ago 1 Lancaster county broadleaf sold for 22 and 23 cents a pound. Xow the most sanguine grower does not expect j to get more than 12 cents at the out side, while the packers declare that because of the depressed state of the tobacco market at large and the unwil lingness of the banks to4ie up any more money in tobacco, this crop will sell under 10 cents. So far not above a few, hundred j acres of broadleaf have been sold, at 9 to 10 cents a pound, though Havana! seed, sold early iu the season, brought from 14 tc 18 cents a pound. Tt is claimed for the new tobacco that it is a free burner, of good bouquet and of color acceptable to the trade, though in the earlier curing stages the color wis j bad. The local leaf dealers have their j 1913 packing in shape tor selling, but' they do not expect much in the way of j business until the new year has fairly i opened. TWO RAIDS ON COIN PHONES Instruments Looted Along Railroads and Then Cast Aside Strafford, Pa., Dec. 28. —A thief ripped the telephone instrument from! the wall of the Overbrook Railroad sta- j tion some time Friday night; took th-?| contents of the coin box, and carried the instrument halfway up the tracks' toward Merion. where it was found yesterday morning. Later the same night it is believe i the same thief visited the trolley sta-' tion of the Philadelphia A; Western i Railway, alongside the Pennsylvania Railroad station at .Strafford. There, too, the telephone was torn away ami ! looted, and then thrown under the sta-1 tio® platform. There may be such a thing as civi-j listed warfare, but the reports received ! op to date do not aid lis particularly i in locating it. ' If you want onions on Sundays and holidays and a salad at night and at noon, leave something out of the given menu and put these excellent foods in. .lust as there is a reason for serv ling soup at the beginning of a meal is there sense in finishing the dinner with a sweet. Popular taste and sci entific principles rule these things. To have those foods that are most agreeable to your taste and needs, at least cost of energy and money is the ireat consideration. Kverv meal should contain some fresh, green food. Onions, lettuce, cel nrv or eabbnge are available all through the year and their mineral .akc Molionk Conference. Fifty thousand dollars already is on hand for the school and 20 aires in the eastern part of the city will be used for the site The curriculum of the school will be equivalent to tho high school course Put heart into little things. Most people must take pleasure out of little things •becausf tliey aie anchored fast in small places. (JAS KILLS A MINISTER Rector of Scranton Church Asphyxiated While Repairing Water Pipes Scranton, Pa., Dec. 28.—When her husband, Conrad Schweitzer, a ma chinist, had not returned home at 10 o'clock yesterday morning, Mrs. Schweitzer went to Robert Lee Masters, a locomotive engineer, who lives next door, and asked him to call the rectory of St. Mark's Episcopal church, where Mr. Schweitzer had gone the day before to help the rector, the Rev. John 0. Dean, repair water pipes that had been frozen. Mr. Masters went to the rec tory and looking through a window lie saw the Rev. Mr. Dean sitting crouched and stiff in a chair. On the floor was the form of Mr. Schweitzer, writhing in agony. Mr. Masters burst open the door and found the rector dead and the young machinist unconscious. A flood of gas from four open cocks in a gas stove tilled the room. Mr. Dean had been away with his wife and two children for their Christ mas dinner at the home of his wife's parents. Returning Saturday morning lie found the water pipes in the rectory frozen and cailed in Mr. Schweitzer to help him fix them. lmte last night Mr. Schweitzer was able to tell what he knew of the trage dy. I'pon returning to the kitchen, after completing the ,iob in the cellar, the men discovered the pipe to the bath room frozen. They put the pan of wa ter on the gas stove and then sat down to wait for it to boil so that they could use it on the frozen pipe. LIVE SNAKE IN STOMACH X-Ray Reveals Reytile, Which Is Re moved Without Surgery- Madison. Wis., Dec. 28.—One of the most unusual cases in the history of local medicine was revealed at a local hospital, when physicians submitting a woman from Waukakee, Dane county, to an X-ray examination, discovered that her stomach contained a live snake six inches long. The woman had not suffered any pain up to the time of the discovery, but was groat ly distressed when told of the' results of the examination. The snake 'was removed without operating. It proved to be a reptile, commonly known as the grass snake, nearly pure white. The hospital authorities refuse to make any statement regarding the case. BOMB IN HINDU TEMPLE One Fatally Hurt, 12 Injured and Thrower of Missile Killed San Francisco, Dec. 28.—During services at a Hindu temple near the Panama-l'acific Exposition ground', yesterday, an unidentified Hindu threw a bomb, which probably fatally iu jured Swami Trigunatita, seriously wounded a dozen others ami wrecked the place. The bomb-thrower was killed in the explosion. No cause for the act could be learned. Fire in Pottsville Ruins Pottsville, Pa., Dei 28.—Fire yester day again broke out in the ruins of the Pennsylvania National bank build ing and the Academy of Music, where a million-dollar fire raged ten days ago. It was necessary to call the fire depart ment out to quench the flames, which swept along the crumbling walls for a considerable distance. When about to commit a base deed, [ res'fect thyself, though there is no wit ness.—Aiisonius. COL ARTHUR MACARTHUR DIES Was Widely-known Mason and Newspa per Man Iroy, N. V, Dec. 2S.—Colonel Ar thur Mac Arthur, grand master of the Grand Encampment, Knights Templar of the United States, died suddenly of apoplexy yesterday at his home here. He was 84 years old. Colonel Mac Arthur was the editor and proprietor of the Troy "Northern Budget'' and was widely known as a newspaper man. He was a prominent Republican. Governor Morton appoint ed him a member of his military staff, and lib was retained in that; capacity bv Governor Black. For many years Colonel MartArfchnr was prominently identified with Mason ry and was elected grand master of fhn Grand Encampment at Denver, Col., in 1013. -He had been a Mason since 1872. SUES TO RECOVER BABY Defendant Says Girl Was Born to Het Under Bush Hillsboro, Til., Dec. 28. A case in which M/s. Minnie Martinique is suing Mrs. Helena Watson for possession of a. three-months-old baby, which each claims as her daughter, will be heard liei> January 2. Mrs. Watson says the child was born to her under a bush by the roadside, September 1(1, while she was hurrying home. Mrs. Martinique says the, child was born to her September 3. and that Mrs. Watson borrowed it, September 10, while she was too weak*to resist. WILD ENGINE IN COLLISION Nine Persons Hurt When Locomotive Strikes Missouri Pacific Train Atchison, Kan., Dec. 28.—Two per sons were seriously injured and seven slightly hurt when a runaway engine, starting from a. roundhouse near here, ran two miles and collided with Mis souri Pacific passenger train No. 10(5 early yesterday. Both engines were battered and the tender of the passen ger train telescoped the baggage car. Henry Kinney, fireman of the pass enger train, and P. I'. Turner, a mail clerk, were severely injured. A good husband is ail asset, but a worthless one is a. liability. BUSINESS COLLEGE*. .. . ■ ii i mm—mm————tmmmmmmm mmm j HBU,. BUSINESS a'M Market Street I Fall Term September First DAY AND NiUiiT WINTER TERM BEGINS MONDAY, JAN. -ITH DAY AND NIGHT SESSIONS SCHOOL OF COMMERCE " Jo S. MARKET SQU. BE HARRISBURG, PA. Cumberland Valley Railroad In Kffect May 24, IKI4. Truiua Leave llurriabura— for Winchester ana Jtfartinsbur* at D.03, *7.&0 a. in., *3.40 p. in. For tiagerstuwn, (Jhambersburg and lnieinieuiato stations, at *5.03, *7.&u il.oi a. m.. *u.4 o, 5.32, *7.40, 11.ui p. in. Additional trains tor Carlisle and Meehanlcsburs at SMS a. m„ 2.15. 3.2/ u.3u, st.3o u. in. For Ulllsbui'K at 5.03. *7,50 and *11.61 a. in., 2,18, *3.40. 5.32, 1i.39 p. m. •Daily. AH other trains daily rxceoi Sunday. J H. TONUS, ki. A. KIUDLU. U T. A. 8-jpU