The star-independent. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1904-1917, December 30, 1914, Page 10, Image 10
10 HOUSEHOLD TALKS Henrietta D. Grauel Brer Rabbit's Come We appreciate game this year since! we have been almost deprived ot' it and I of all the wild things that reach our! table none have liner flavor or yieldl themselves to the art of the cook morel easily than the rabbit. The wild flavor is delicious andj makes a pleasant change from safe andi sane pork chops and beef-steaks. Sometimes there is a flavor that is a; little too wild tn suit one and then' il is designated as high. This is found! in older animals more often than inj voting ones and does not always come; from their being too long dead. The objectionable odor mav be re nun ed by soaking the jointed rabbit in water containing a little soda until! the thin membrane tliar covers the llesh c:in be pulled off.. Remove all of this, that you can when the rabbit will be! found as sweet and fresh as though a domesticated Belgium hare. Rabbit's flesh is dry, so the best wnv to prepare them is bv stewing or by! baking in a covered pin. Any recipe yen use for spring chicken may be used for cooking Runny, but use a little more seasoning than usual. W hen you have a brace of rabbits t u'v may be tilled with oyster dressing or bread stuffing and have their legs skewered firmly to their sides and baked. i ut slices of finely flavored bacon j into strips and bv across them when Mlf your taste demands all Havana qual ity smoke OMoja 10c Cigars There are 50 years of "know how" back of this brand, and they are the J richest, most fragrant and satisfying cigars a dime can buy. Made by A John C. Herman 6 Co. ♦> ❖*>❖♦>❖ *•> * «$» *♦>vv❖* ❖❖•> ❖ «§» * »!• * *>»:«*> ** * * •> •> •> •;« •> ►> ♦:« •> v llf You Are Looking | For a Pure Beer— | ♦> ♦> * Made of the finest Malt and Hops—Sparkling Fil- % * tered Water—and Purest Yeast —by the best Sani- * % tary Methods. Order DOEHNE Beer. % ! DOEHNE BREWERY ! Bell 820 L Independent 318 * i- ❖•> * •:< * .j. .> * •>,j. ODD FELLOWS' BUILDING BURNS It Was Built Three Years Ago at a Cost of $25,000 Berwick, Dec. 110. —Eire of unknown origin early yesterday destroyed the three-story brick building of Berwick of OJd Fellows, erected only three years ago at a cost of $2-5,000. The tire was discovered on the first lloor in the department store of M. Sherman. Nearby buildings in the busi ness section of the town were saved after a hard tight. The losses are Fellows buildu p. $23,000, insurance, $13,000; M. Sherman, S9,(MM), insur ance, $7,000; I'ewawkee Tribe of Rc.r Men, SI,OOO, io insiiinjiice; Berwick ('ommanderv, Knights cr, Malta. sl.- liOO, $1,200 insurance. Other lodges also 10-t their paraphernalia. Mskss Address to Tea;hp.rs Danville, Pa.. Dec. 30. — Dr. s, r. Kchniucker, of the West Chester >tate Norma! school, spoke before the Moil tour County Teachers' Institute here yesterday. Every teacher in the county is in attendance. 13 AND ALBERT STREETS J 2 Minutes from PENNSYLVANIA and PHILADELPHIA t READING fj terminals - ! NEAR TO EVERYWHERE j 200JSeatifi/al &>ut j <sic)p Jt?oomj XdttA J3cith andtfflwving Jce ZrJate^, | ancts upi | Popular Cafe, Grill J and Restaurant r { JAM&S C V/ALS H. T^nafter 'nU„j, mil., ff they are finally in the baking pan. Now dredge with seasoned flour. Add some water, so there will be gravy, and bake forty minutes. The gravy should be well made with rich milk; it is the best part of the rabbit dinner, some folks say. Whatever remains of cold rabbit can be utilized in a potpie just as pork or chicken is. Or make a rich baking powder biscuit and cut the left-over meat into bits and cover with a cream sauce. When the biscuits are baked split them open and fill with the creamed rabbit mixture. Pour gravy over them. DAILY MENU Breakfast Torn Meal Mush, Sugar, Cream Dried Fruit, Cream Oreame'd Chicken on Toast Eggs Coffee Luncheon Chicken Bouillon Halibut Creamed in Cases Spinach Baked Potatoes Salad, French Dressing Angel Food Chocolate Dinner Fish and Oysters Baked Together Celery. Fresh Onions. Radishes Baked Stuffed Rabbits Creamed Onions Steamed Potatoes, Parsley Sauce Tomato Salad Cheese Sticks Marshmallow Whip i PROF. T. A. EDWARDS DIES i Dean of Women's College and Peda gogy Professor at Bucknell 11 Eewisbur,g, Dei'. JO.—Prof. Thomas j , A. Edwards, dean of the Women's Col-! lege of Buc knell University, died herej yesterday of pneumonia, "after a ten I days illness. He was 65 years old. 1 Professor Edwards has toeen connect-j -1 e<i with Bucknell University for twen-! • ty years, coming here from Union City, ; where he had been principal of the High school. His first ten years at Bucknell was spent as principal of the • academy ami the last ten vears has' been at the head of the Women's Col- 1 lege and professor of pedagogy of the! university. He was a graduate of Al legheny College. Professor Edwards is survived bv! 1 his widow and two sons, Merle M. Ed-| wards, of Bellevue, 0„ and Roger 8. 5 Edwards, of Pittsburgh. His remains I will I>e taken Wednesday morn in" to | Grotou, N. Y., lor hurial. GETS LONG LOST JEWELS Delighted Woman Will Drop Case Four I Years Old Shenandoah, Pa., Dec. 30.—Four: years ago Mrs. John O'Hcarn, a wealthy ladv of this city, lost jewelry I among which was a diamond sunburst <iud diamond pins .allied at SBOO, on her wav to a Reading train here. De | \ ite diligent seat eh and advertising, no trace of the articles could be found i •:ntil yesterday afternoon, when Chief! 1 antlin and Captain Msnley arrested a ! foreign woman trying to sell the articles I to local jewelers. Mrs. O'Hcarn was so delighted to re cover the lost jewelry that she refused! to prosecute the woman and had the) case dropped before Justice Gilblon last , evening. FIFTH DEATH IN FAMILY Typhoid Claims Daniel H. Peter, Rela-1 tive of 111-fated Hilberts Bovertown, Pa., Dec. :!o.—The fifth j death now has taken place in the ill-! fated William Hilbert family, of Pike-' ville, Berks county. Daniel H. Peter, aged 58, of Viola, Delaware, died live weeks after his sis ! ter in-law, Mrs. W. Hilbert, one of thiei lirst of the 1 1 victims of typhoid t'e- ' ver. Peter attended the funeral four weeks ago, contracting the disease. Mr. Peter was the station agent at j V iola, owner of a large canning factorv aJid prominent in organizations. HARRISBTTKG STAR-TNDEPENDENT, WEDNESDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 30, 1914. R!i!!iinHiiiiii«niiiHiiHiHirai!iiiiiiiii!!iii![ninimniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiii!iiii'ij Story of J the Blood | Red Rose J By f, Kathlyn Williams | ■umMtimßNiimmiMß | I From the Photoplay fey JAMES OLIVER 1 CURWOOD jj With Illustrations from the Pro* r g tfuctlon tf the SeUc Polyscope Co, S fiiiflfiWinmititiimmitiifliiiiniiimfifiiiniinifiinnfniiiiHiiiifiifiiiniTiiniiii^ (Copyright, I*U, by U» Sellg Polyicop* Co.) Continued "Hall, Rivarre," one said. "The queen wiihee to apeak with thy daugh "As Your Majesty Will," Replied Sancha. ter Godiva for which purpose has her majesty dispatched us to escort the maiden to the palace." Thus spoke cunningly the spokes man for the six retainers whom San cha had told to execute the queen's command and bring the heart of the maiden. Rivarre and his wife wailed In dis tress when they heard these words, for they felt instinctively that harm was Impending for Godira —else why 6hould the queen's retainers come for Godiva at this unseemly hour of the night? Rivarre pleaded with the men to depart in peace and leave their daughter to enjoy her sleep. This information was what the men sought. Godiva slept. Then Godiva was surely i« yonder sleeping cham ber. They hurled Rivarre to the floor when he attempted to intercept them. And they brushed the wailing mother aside. And into the sleeping room of Godiva the six men darted. Godiva, awakened from sleep, sprang up in great alarm, as the six men rushed toward her coucji. No time had she to cry out, for paralysis seized lier as she saw, gleaming in the hand of one of the men, a dagger that men aced her heart. By rough hands was she seized and held now, as the man with the gleaming weapon pushed away her nightrobe and prepared to plunge the dagger into her heart. But what was this? More men swarmed into the room—aud next in stant Godiva realized that she had been snatched from out of the arms of the first group of nen and hence ont of H—ch of the gleaming dagger. The newcomers handled her with ut most gentleness, careful each not to harm a hair of her head. For these were the king's retainers, who had been told by Sancha that they must bring the maiden to the paiac? alive. What a terrible thing now did Go diva witness' The two groups 01 men, each determined to possess their By Rough Hands Vfa» She Seized. prey, began fighting. With daggers they (ought back and forth across the room, till only four in each group re mained, two of each group having been slain. Godiva, in the midst of the melee, saw an opportunity to fly. Through the door she bolted and through the kitchen, calling upon her mother and father to follow her. "We will fly to the cave of Hagar the witch," she told her distracted parents. "Come quickly, my father, my mother." Out through the door they fled, leaving the king's retainers still fight ing among themselves in the bed chamber. But outside the cottage lurked still another enemy in the form of Sancha himself. Ay, Sancha the chamberlain had all this time been waiting in comfort and safety outside the cottage, not caring overmuch what the outcome of the fray within might be. But now, too suddenly for the chamberlain's entire composure, the situation was changed. He saw the maiden Godiva flying from the cottage door. A moment more, unless he, Sancha, acted with promptitude, the girl would escape him altogether. Here was indeed an- [ other dilemma for the chamberlain. To fall to bring the girl to the palace at all, neither dead nor alive, would be to his own undoing. He leaped upon Godira, therefore, and held her as In a rise. Then speed ily he rerlewed the situation. If he killed her here and now It would get to the king's ears that Sancha him self had slain the girl whom he had been commanded to produce alive. ! And then Sancha would die. Whereas, If lje took the girl to the palace alive, his worst punishment would be banishment by the queen. And surely 'twas better to suffer mere banishment ttan to leave this world forever. In consequence. It was Ban cha's decision to take the maiden to the palace alive. And he would trust to good fortune to keep from the ears of the queen the details of what had happened this night. "Mistress Godiva," said Bancha, "thou art wanted at the palace by the king, who has commanded me to fetch thee." "The king!" cried the girl. In nt most dismay. "Then would that the dagger of yonder murderers had found my heart! For 'twould have been better far to die than to go to the king at his palace." Meantime, Rivarre and his wife dashed on toward Hagar's cave, sup posing that Godiva came in their wake. And now, before any of the light ing retainers could come from the cottage, Sancha mounted his horse, pulled the maiden up In his brawny arms and rode away full speed for the caßtle of the king of Urania. CHAPTER VII. The Secret Chamber. Nervously King Leofric of Urania paced his apartment, twitching at his mustache and pulling his beard. Why, he pondered, did not the varlets come with the beauty of the forest? From time to time he gazed eagerly at the door and listened expectantly, his features distorted by the passion which the very thought of the lovely Godiva inflamed within him. And then the door opened and San cha entered leading the affrighted captive All in white she was ar rayec. ,n the clinging folds of the drap'ry of her couch; for not a mo ment had been hers to supplement with cloak or mantle the robe de nuit in which the king's retainers had sur prised her. "Welcome, Mistress Godiva," the king said, bowing low. "Welcome to the palace. Thou dost tremble, child. Surely 'tis but the trembling of oue tn strange surroundings and not De cause of fear of youi sovereign." "Ay. in that last hazard of thy evil brain," the girl said, emboldened by the mortal fear that possessed her, "thou speakest very truth. For, in deed, I am in great fear of thee, sire." "Calm yourself, maid." the king said. "Rest upon yonder couch and fear no evil. As for thee, Sancha— you may leave us. 1 would speak alone with our guest." Sancha bowed and backed from the presence. King l-pofric now sat upon the couch beride Godiva. "Godiva," he said, "thou hast In spired In my heart a great love for thee. Riches thou shalt have and fine raimpnt. Thou hast but to con sent graciously to abide within the palace as my guest. Thou shalt be raised from rank of peasant to that of a great lady. Art pleased?" "Xo. sire," the girl replied, simply. "I crave but one boon of thee. Per mit me to return to the house of my father." "Ah, so thus blows the wind," paid his majesty, springing up and scarcely now concealing his true and vile self from his helpless captive. "Since so blows the wind, Godiva, then it will be necessary to immure thee here till such time as thou shalt become accustomed to the new life 1 destine for thee." With that the king pressed a secret spring beside a great painting that was fitted in the wall. The painting swung on a central pivot, revealing a chamber beyond—the secret chamber. "Godiva be pleased to enter thy chamber," the king commanded. The girl sprang up and sought to dart from the apartment. But the king intercepted her and by force thrust her through the opened panel and into the secret chamber. He then closed the panel behind him. "This is thy very own bedchamber, Godiva," the king said. "Yonder la thy couch and here thou shalt tarry as my guest. And shouidst thou con tinue to be unwilling guest, then count this chamber also thy prison." Ills majesty leered at her, gloated over her beauty, sought, to take her hand with loverly tenderness. But ii was only to find his kingly hand spurned by the peasant maid, who thrust aside his caressing fingers and imbedded both her own hands within the folds of her white robe. Meanwhile, to the chamber of Dui cinea, the queen, went Sancha. He found the queen ensconced behind the curtains of her couch. "Who comes?" her majesty asked, from behind the curtains. "Sancha!" was the reply. Next moment the queen emerged from the curtains, throwing around her shoulders the while an exquisite silken mantle. "And thy trophy!" the queen asked, eagerly. "Where is the bleeding heart thou wert commanded to bring?" "A thousand laments, fair Dulclnea. The king's own men rescued the maid, as my varlets were about to plunge the dagger into her heart." "Fool! Fool!" cried the queen, In terrible rage and disappointment. "Then the girl Is already within the palace—and alive." "Even so. your majesty—alive. And In the king's apartment. His majesty dismissed me, doubtless for the pur pose of smuggling the girl Into the secret chamber of which our sover eign believes he alone possesses knowledge." "I have a plan. Sancha. The girl jc. E. AUGHINBAUGH 1 THE UP-TO-DATE PRINTING PLANT 1 <0 jyl J. L. L. KUHN, Secretary-Treasurer f| | PRINTING AND BINDING j Now Located in Our New Modern Building jj| I 46 and 48 N. Cameron Street, Near Market Street | 1 BELL TELEPHONE 2013 [4 Commerical Printing Book Binding Q We are prepared with the necessary equipment Onr ViinHnnr u j, . Hu to take oare of any work you may want—cards. j 0^B ook Bi« i a ? e edition LJ stationery, bill heads, letter heads urograms Binding of all kinds receives JAJ legal blanks and business forms of all kinds! SHORT IA NOTTnp EXI w° LINOTYPE COMPOSITION FOR THE TRADE. make BANK BOOKS LAY AND fe STAY FLAT WHEN OPEN. By Book Printing ' |y With our equipment of Ave linotypes, working PreSS Work l. l v ] day and night, we are in splendid shape to take jm care of book printing—either SINGLE VOL- r P ress room is one of the largest and most UMES or EDITION WORK. complete in this section of the state, in rdditicn 03 to the automatic feed presses, we liave two _ _ , _ folders which give us the advantage of gettiaj Paper Books a Specialty the wcrk out in exceedingly quick time. ; ;-i No matter how small or how large, the same will , . ; ' i b» produced en short notice To the Public _ .. When in the market for Printing or Binding of [ : -|| JKUling any description, see U3 before placing your order, djj Is one of our specialties. This department has ** Wlll t0 our MUTUAL benefit. been equipped with the latest designed ma- 0 trouble t0 « lve estimates or answer questions. chlnery. No blank is too intricate. Our work CO in this line Is unexcelled, clean an* distinct lines, PomomW ffi) SB no blots or bad lines—that is the kind of ruling nememuei j that business men of to-day demand. Ruling for We give you what you want, the way you want Ma r|| the trade. it, when you want it. [i 1 I ===== ffl 1 46 and 48 N. Cameron Street i W jtj g Near Market Street HARRISBURG, PA. ffi JV'l ' '''■ a A Bell Telephone call will bring one of our solicitors. ' | is even now In the secret chamber with the king. It is not too late, San cha, to render me the service I have "Then Count This Chamber Also Thy Prison." asked of thee. Thou must to that secret chamber and there find a way to slay this maiden, even though thou hast to tie concealed in the chamber till the girl sleeps." "Thou dost forget, majesty. Th 9 king also is in the secret chamber with the girl. How, then, can Sancha perform this service for thee in en tire secrecy?" " 'Tis simple enough, Sancha, thou stupid! Know you not that the secret chamber may be entered also by a door that is at the top of the stone steps leading up from the room over the donjon? Enter thou, therefore, the room over the donjon. Steal thou then up the stone steps to the door which thou wilt find at the top of the flight. Open that door and thou wilt find thyself within the secret chamber. Wait there till the king enters with the maid. Conceal thyself and wait till the king departs from the chamber. Then do thy work." To Be Continued. LEFT WITH VOTERS Senator Owen's Measure Would Sub mit It to Referendum Washington, Dec. 30.—Aggressive warfare by the United States would be possible only on approval of a majority of the voters of the country, under a constitutional amendment proposed yes terdny by Senator Owen. The power of the President to call out troops to resist nn invasion would not be altered, but declaration of an offensive war would have to be sub mitted to a referendum, STEAMBHIPa B ER MUDT These Chitrutltiic Ulnnil* Are JVow »1 Their Beat S. S. "btRMUUIAN" bold* toe record —10 lioura—la the newest and only twin-screw steam ship sailing to Bermuda, and the only one landing passenger* at tha docK at Hamilton without transfer by tender. Hound Trip with menla 4}E.tnd and itateroom berth up lull particular* apply to A. K. ODTBHURIDfiE <fc CO.. A««at. Qn*. bee P. S. Co., I.trt., at) llrondmr, New York I P. LOHXE UVMMKI,, 103 !Kar> krt »t., Harrlabura, Pa, or Tick et Aseat, SCREWDRIVER FOILS BANDIT Helps Cashier Out of Bank Vault, and Robber Is Captured Bingham, L'tali. Dei*. HO.—A man who gave the name of Bert Heasted held up Cashier Karl Randall, two other men and a boy at the Bingham State bank at 3 o'clock yesterday, took $lB,- 000 in currency ami was arrested with out resistance soon afterward. His quick capture was due to the fact that the cashier carried a screw driver in his pocket, to be used, he said, in case he were held up and locked in his vault, as was the cashier in an other Utah bank robbery recently. Heasted locked the three men and the boy in the vault, but Randall used his screwdriver to open the door and was able to escape in a few minutes. Policeman H. White overtook Heas ted, arrested him without trouble and found all the money in his pockets. ( WON HIS FUNERAL ON A BET Barber Collects After Death on Most Elaborate Scale Possible Little Rock, Ark.. !>ec. 30.—The body of Walter Campbell, a negro bar ber, was buried yesterday in the most j elaborate casket that the largest local j undertaking establishment could pro vide. The he>:irse was followed by a | procession of carriages provided by the undertaker. •lust before the Jeffries-Johnson fight, Campbell made a bet with the white undertaker. If Jeffries won, Campbell was to shave the undertaker free as long as they both lived. If ! Johnson won, the undertaker was to I provide a state funeral for Campbell, j Yesterday the undertaker conscieu- I kiouslv carried out the terms of the ! bet. PHILIP D. ARMOUR TO WED j Chicag-osn Will Marry Miss Gwendo lin Condon, of New York New York, Defc. 30. —Philip D. Ar- I mour. son of Mrs. P. A. Valentine and j a grandson of the late Philip Dan ; forth Armour, of Chicago, obtained a marriage license yesterday to wed Miss Gwcndolin Condon, of this city. The wedding will take place on January S a.t the Church of Heavenly Rest, here. Mr. Armour is 29 years old. His bride-to-ibe, who is the daughter of Thomas G. Condon, of Newburgh, N. Y., is 21. BRAKEMAN KILLED BY ENGINE j Thomas J. Mclntyre Ground to Death in Glenolden Yards Easton, Pa., Dec. 30.—Thomas John ; Mclntyre, aged 24, a brakeman on the j Ije'high Valley Railroad, was ground to death beneath his locomotive in the Glenolden yards Monday night. He was riding on the pilot of the engine, his legs dangling over the sides, when one of his shoos caught in a guard rail and threw him finder the engine. lie moved here recently from South Bethle hem. TRAIN KILLS ENGINEER Stephen D. Mcintosh Struck by Freight at Altoona Mtoona, Pa., Dec. 30.—Stephen D. Mcintosh, 54 years old, a locomoti\*> engineer on the Pennsylvania road, was struck and instantly killed here yesterday by a freight train. Mcintosh got down from his engine when it stopped and stopped, unwitting ly, directly in front of the fast ap proaching freighf t'ain. Hope, unaccompanied by work, has often made patches conspicuous. CONFESSES FATAL STABBING ' Louis Travato Says He Killed Jerome Pincitori at McAdoo Pottsville, Pa., Dec. 30.— '* I killed him," confessed Louis Travato, of Mc- Adoo, when accused of stabbing Joroin s Pincitori to death in a tight in front of the saloon of Pasquo in Mc- Adoo early Monday morning. Five j men were held hi connection with the J killing. The inquest aud investigation I was conducted a little more than ten j hours after the crime was committed [and, although the five men endeavored , to tell ji story which would divert, stis ' picioa from nil of them, their state ments conflicted. Travato was then questioned Ijv Curo j net - Moore and Corporal Da vies and j confessed. He aftorwards made a j written acknowledgment of the murder. HURT IN TROLLEY SMASH Five Seriously Injured in Crossing Col lision at Wilkes-Barre j Willtci-Rarre, I'a., Dec. 30.- Five persons were severely injured and a ! dozen others sustained slight iajtiriiM I yesterday when a heavy car of the ; Lackawanna and Wyoming Valley i Railroad crashed into a crowded trolley .car of the Wilkes-Barre Railway Com pany on a grade crossing iu this city. Many passengers on the trolley- car were cut by living glass. None of the passengers on the larger car was iu i jure. I. PASTOR GETS PROFESSORSHIP The Rev. Joseph Whitaker Transferred to Overbrook Seminary I Pottsville, Dec. 30.—The Rev. Jo ! sP'ph Whitaker, pastor of St. Joseph s | Catholic church of Port Carbon', has 1 been notified of his transfer to a pro j fessorship at G\ei'.irook Seminary, The change becomes effective January 4. The Rev. Mr. Whitaker came to ' Port Carbon four years ago from St. i Francis de Sales church, Philadelphia, i and many improvements have been made under his pastorate. It does seem that a submarine heroic enough to go into battle and be sunk is deserving of a better name than a j hyphenated combination of a*couple of letters and a numeral. BUSINESS COLLEGE®. I übu,. BUaiNxlkS COijjji.uii j 3-9 Market Street Fall Term September First OAY AND NiuflT ' 1 ■' WINTER TERM BEGINS MONDAY, JAN. 4TH DAY AND NIGHT SESSIONS SCHOOL OF COMMERCE 15 S. MARKET SQUARE HARRISBURG, PA. Cumberland Valley Railroad in fcflect May 24, 1»14. Trntn* Leave UurrUburu— tor Winchester anu Alartlnsburr at £,.03, *7.50 a. m.. *3.40 p. m. Kor Hagerntuwn, Chambersbur* and Iniei meuiaie stations, at *0.03, «7 50 ii.,3 a. ni„ 5.33. • 7.40. 11.0 i p. in. Additional trains for Carllals and M chanlcsburg at t».4S a. m.. 2.15. I. IV 0.3u, u.iiu p. m. l'or Dlnsburg at 5.03, »7.50 and 'll.ll a. m„ 2.18. *3,40, 5.32, 6..10 p. m. • Dally. All other trains daily *XC*DI Sunday. J H. TONQE, H. A RID DUB, O. P. A. Supt.