12 HOUSEHOLD fS|j TALKS ■ j|f Henrietta D. Grauel Mid-Winter Dishes Com soup is one of the best winter dishes and contains splendid fuel val ues for this sort of weather. With it for a prelude to the diuner out spoken members of the fmnilv will say that not ranch else is needed. The "Down-East" recipe for this is the best: Half a can of corn pressed through a colander <-r vegetable press to remove the hulls, or half a can of corn pulp. Three pints of rich milk, one cup of Vieat stock. Blend three tablespoons of dour ami when the above is cooking add to the mixture. Beat yolks of two eggs light and pour a lit tle of the hot mixture on them, beating all the while, to prevent curdling, add seasoning of salt, pepper and a little onion juice. Return all to the tire and stir until the soup looks smooth and rich. Serve very hot with buttered crotons. It seems a mistake to serve hominy at a meal where one has corn soup, as is intimated in the menu below, yet these two dishes arc so different that it seems iimpossible that both should be from the same article. Hut. indeed, corn is one of the most wonderful foods we have in this respect; it is a cereal, a vegetable and. when sweetened and served with a jelly sauce as in the hominy crescents, dessert or "sweet." More than this, corn meal makes one of the most wholesome breads that we have on our table. True, it lacks gluten but a little wheat dour sifted with it supplies this. When you have ex hausted the list of corn foods, having served it in its many styles, you will 100,000 CHICAGOANS IDLE Great Throng Unemployed, Exclusive of Drifting Population Chicago. Jan. 22.—One hundred thou sand Chicagoans are out of work this winter, according? to a report ot the •' Public Welfare Commission to Mayor , Harrison. Tnis -3 exclusive of the drift ing population of idle. Statements were received by the commission from 2-IS tirms. which for the most part gave depression in busi ness as the reason. Fourteen firms re ported increases in {he number of em ployes. EVEN OLD FARMERS STUDY Up to 80 Years of Age They Go to Higa School at Last Lancaster. Pa., .Tan. 22.—Twenty live farmers, ranging in age from 20 to 89 years, attended the tirst imion of the agricultural c nrse in tie West Uun ; eter Township High School. The in -!rucior was Professor Kauffman and his them,- was •"Formation of Soils." At the next session farmers will bring sacks of fertilizers and there will be an explanation of the ingredients that make them up. Harrisburg's O Distinguishe will find MO J A all Havana T 10c CIGARS " f rich, fragrant and fully satisfying— W catering to the requirements of the Amcst critical tobacco tastes. Made by John C. Herman & Co. i DOEHNE BEER I ? A Brewery construction which admits of perfect * | cleanliness of floors, walls and ceilings. Perfect ven- * % tilation and equipment. Best and purest Malt. Hops | % and Ingredients. * •> « Skilled Brewmaster—Proper Management + | RESULT } BE H El hgrade produ ale f DOEHNE ! * Beii 8»i Order It Independent alB ♦: f. 4•> «;• •> <• •> •> •> *t» »> <♦ «5» •> •> '!• •>•>•£••> v•> <• *> •> <« •> ♦> •> ♦> •> •*« •> <• •> ••• .. | "/f Brought The | ATl d affain *|i I S 7"£V THEM I s Bell Phone 3280 Independent 245 246 ' j -well named "King Corn" by early set tlers of this country. Rut to return to our hominy—this is particularly tine with venison and agree that this wonderful graiu was with all fowl and tish. In cooking venison choose, if you have a choice, the saddle, then the haunch and lastly the neck, took it rather underdone, for so arc the fine juices preserved and always have a tart jelly served with it. Have the oven extremely hot when it goes in, for. of course, you will hake it, baste it often while it is cooking and if it seems to be browning too much, dredge a light covering of rtour over it. DAILY MENU Breakfast Steamed t'ereal with Dates Sugar and Cream Creamed Dried Beef on Toast Graham items Coffee Luncheon thicken Salad French Bread, Sweet Butter Cheese Canapes Chocolate Pudding Hot Chocolate with Whipped Cream Dinner Radishes Clams Buttered Sandwiches Lemon Halves Corn Soup Tomatoes Rolls Saddle Venison Sweet Potatoes Brussel's Sprouts Hominy Crescents Jelly Sauce V inter Salad Fig Puddiug, Snowv Sauce Coffee MOST FAITHFUL SERVANT DIES Negress* H6, Was Eighty-one Years in One Employ New York. .'an. 22.—Adelaide Field Smith, negress. aged S6, was buried this week in Oakland cemetery, Yonk • ers. She was born in Lew Ist on. D(L .January 14. 1>29. and was employe: by Samuel Thaokara, o£ Philadelphia, eighty-one years. For the last two months she had been in the employ of Mrs. George Hnyner. of No. !' Saratoga avenue. Y'onkers. Fourteen years ago Miss Smith won a prize offered by a new-paper tor a serv ,ui: who had been in one employ for the longest time. Dodges a Killing Cleaver Altoona, Pa., Jan. 22. —When rival butchers became involve: in a quarrel at market yesterday Emerson B. De ford. of Martinsburg. seired a cleaver, and made a swing at Jacob P. Kline, of Altoona. Kline dodged behind a post, whi.-h prevented his being struck or. the head; but the cleaver almost severe i 1 his right hand from the arm. Dofcrd is under bail. STAR INDEPENDENT WANT ADS. BRING RESULTS. I ! HAKRIRBURG STAR-INDEPENDENT. FRIDAY EVENING, JANUARY 22. 1915 PEG"! 5f X O MY £ m HEART llfey By J. Hartlev Manners A Comedy of Youth Founded by Mr. Manners on His Great Play of the Same Title—lllustrations From Photographs of the Play Copyright, 1913. by DodU. Mead £y Company t CONTINUED.) The beat of her heart spoke it. "He loves yen."' The throbbing of her brain shouted it. "He loves .vou!'' The cry of lior soul whispered it. "Ue loves your She stretched out lier bauds to bim: "My love is yours, jn>t as yours is mine, Let us join iMir lives and give them to the suffering and t tie op pressed.'' Ue looked tip :it tier in wonder. "1 d:ireu°t. rtiini; what 1 ami" "Yon nre tbe beet that is iu me. We are mates." "A peasant: A lieggrtr!" "Vou are the nobiost of tiie ooble." "A couviet." "Our Saviour was crucified so that his people should be redeemed. You hnve si von tbe pain of your body so that your people may l>e free." "It wouldn't l»e fnir to you." he pleaded. "If you leave me it will be unfair to us both." "Oh. my dear one! My dear one!" He folded her in his arms. "I'll give the best of my days to guard you and protect you and bring you happiness." "I am happy now." and her voice died to a wtiisper. Three days afterward Nathaniel Kingsnorth returned late at night from u political banquet. It had been a givat evening. At last it seemed that life was about to give him what he most wished for. llis dearest ambitious were, apparently, about to be realized. Ue had been called on as n stanch Conservative to add his quota to the already wonderful array of brilliant perorations of seasoned statesmen and admirable speakers. Kingsnorth had excelled himself. Never had he spo ken so powerfully. Reins one of the only nirn at the banquet who had en joyed even a brief glimpse of Ireland, he made the solution of the Irish ques tion the main topic of his speech. Speaking lucidly and earnestly, he plaeed before them his pauacea for ft ( . v • «*- I Jitb 111 - -v i i ml j- * l ; \ I I v "Then aroae a picture «>i b.or sister Monica." Irish ills His hearers were enthralled. When be sat down the cheering w*s prolonged. When he left tbe gathering he wns ; in a condition of ecstasy. Lying back fl in Id the cushions during his long drive heme, he closed his eves and pic tured the future. His inmsinatiou ran riot. It tool; wings and Hew fro height to beiglit. He saw himself the ] leader of a party-"lbe Kingsnorth party;"—controlling his followers with j a fcand of iron and driving them to , vote according to his judgment and , his decree. By the dine be had reached home he ; had entered the cabinet aud was be- j ing spoken of as tile probable prime I minister. He iMiured out a liquor aud stood sip ping it as lie luincft over the letters j brought hv tbe night's imst. One nr- j rested him. It bad been delivered by i hand and was marked "Most Urgent." I As be read the letter every vestige color left his face. CHAPTER V». A House of Card*. KINGSNORTH sank into a chair. Tbe letter slipped from bis An gers. All bis dreams had van ished in a moment. His bouse of cards bad toppled down. His ambi tions were surely and |»ositlvely de stroyed at one stroke. He mechanical ly picked up the letter and reread it. Had it been his death sentence It could not bnve a fleeted liini more cruelly: i'oar Nathaniel—l scarcely know how to wiite tn you about what has happened. 1 am afrsiil I ain In some small measure to bin me. Ten days aso your sister show ed mo a letter from a man named O'Con nell— Kingsnorth crushed the letter in his hand as lie read the bated tiaiue—the name of the niun who had caused him so much discomfort during that unfor tunate visit to bis estate in Ireland. How lie blamed himself now for bav ins ever gone there! t here was indeed a curse ' the other. In con: i;i\ with a noted Irish or ganizer hi onnell had spoken in many of the big . itii-s i.f the United States and was everywhere hailed as a hero and a im.rtvr to English tyranny. Hut lie ha.l one ever present handi cap-!! drawback he had never felt during the years of struggle preceding his marriage. His means were indeed small. He tried to eke out a little in come writing articles for the uewspa- All His Dreams Had Vanished In ■ Moment. pers and magazines. Hut the recom pense was pitiful. He could not bear without a pang to see Angela in the dingy surroundings that he could bare ly afford to provide for her. Ou her part Angela took nothing with her but a few jewels her mother had left ber. some clothes and very little money. The money soon disap peared. aud then one by one the keep sakes of ber mother were parted with. But they never lost heart. Through It all they were happy. All the poetry of O'Conuell's nature came uppermost, learened. as it was. by the deep faith and veneration of his wife. This strangely assorted fervent man and gen*b' woman seemed to have C. E. AUGHINBAUGH I THE UP-TO-DATE PRINTING PLANT 1 c| J* L. L. KUHN, Secretary-Treasurer | PRINTING AND BINDING I Now Located in Our New Modern Building jjl kjO . A BELL TELEPHONE 2013 p i - I gj Commerical Printing Book Binding our blnder * can «*<» doe, handle large edition | rtaUonew bill he Jfs Work " Job B "* k Biding of all kinds receives 1 U« , ««h £?! l. . , heads, programs, our earelul attention. SPECIAL INDEXING jf Lii-i LINOTYPE COMPOSITION rOR THE TBjVJDE* and PUNCHING ON SHORT NOTICE. We E ijiXNUiilii L-OiVlrOblilON TOE THE TRADE. niako BIaANK BOOKS THAT LAY FLAT AMD M L ! STAY FLAT WHEN OPEN FOG m Book Printing $ £y With our equipment of Ave linotypes, working PreSS Work M |U') day and night, we are in splendid shape to take . , p-fj care of book printing—either SINGLE VOL- press room Is one o. the largest and most M i;jJ UMES or EDITION WORK. complete in this section of the state, in addition y to the automatic feed presses, we have two ' \ folders which give us the advantage of getting „ Paper Books a Specialty 0,6 wrk out 111 exceedingly quick time. J yy No matter ho\r smat. or how large, the same will _ ~ _ , Sj j b# produced on short notice TO the Public '0:. _ .. When in the market for Printing or Binding of Cj IVI KUlmg a«y description, see us before placing your order. (HI [jyS Is one of our specialties. This department has We believe it will be to our MUTUAL bencftt. % ky been equipped with the latest designed ma- Ko troubl ® « lve estimates or answer question*, k ty chinery. No blank is too intricate. Our work 0 (Th in this line is unexcelled, clean an* distinct lines, Pamnmher pi feftj no blots or bad llnee—that is the kind of ruling rvemciliucr y ky>" that business men of to-day demand. Ruling for We give you what you want, the way you want M jVj the trade. It, when you want it. ~ Q G. E. AUGHINBAUGH j iy 46 and 48 N. Cameron Street I S3 D jg Near Market Street HARRISBURG, PA. p A Bell Telephone call will bring one of our solicitors. Pj solved Kit- gran u, r ~.~ery of happiness between two people. But the poverty chafed O'Connell— not for himself, but for the frail, lov ing. woman who had given her life iuto his care. Ills active bri'in was continually try ing to devise new ways of adding to his meager income. He multiplied his duties. He worked far into the night when he could find n demand for his articles. But little by little his sources of revenue failed bim. Some fresh and horrible agrarian crimes in Ireland, for which the home rule party - was blamed, for awhile turned the tide of sympathy against his party. The order was sent out to discontinue meetings for the purpose of collecting funds in America—funds tbe Irish Americans had been so cheer fully and plentifully bestowing on the "cause." O'Connell was recalled to Ireland. His work was highly commended. Some day they would send him to the United States again as a special pleader. At present be would be of greater value at home. ne was instructed to apply to the treasurer of the fund and arrange ments would be made for his passage back to Ireland. He brought the news to Angela with a strange feeling of fear and disap pointment. He had built so much on making a wonderful career in tbe great new world and returning home some day to Ireland with the means of re lieving some of her misery and with his wife guarded, as she should be. from the possibility of want. And here was he going back to Ireland as poor as be left it, though richer im measurably in the love of Angela. STAR=INDEPENDENT CALENDAR FOR 1915 May be had at the business office of the Star-Independent for or will be sent to any address in the United States, by mail, for 5 cents extra to cover cost of package and postage. The Star-Independent Calendar for 1916 is another of the handsome series, featuring'important local views, issued by this paper for many years. It is 11x14 inches in size and shows a picture, extraordinary for clearness and detail, of the "Old Capitol," built 1818 and destroyed by fire in 1897. It is in fine half-tone effect and will be appreciated for its historic value as well as for its beauty. Mail orders given prompt attention. Remit 15 cents in stamps, and ad dress all letters to the STAR-INDEPENDENT 18-20-22 South Third Street Harrisburg, Pa. She was sitting perfectly still, her eyes on the floor, when he entered the room. He came in so softly that she did not hear him. He lifted her head and looked into her eyes. He noticed with certainty what had been so far only a vague, ill defined dread. Her face was very, very pale and trans parent. Her eyes were sunken and had a strange brilliancy. She was much slighter and far more ethereal than on that day when they stood on the declc of the ship and turned their faces so hopefully to the new world. He felt a knifelike stab startle through his blood to his heart. His breath caught. Angela looked up at him radiantly. He kissed her and with mock cheer fulness he said laughingly: "Such news, me dariin'! Such won dherful news:*' "(Jood news, dear?" "The best in the wurrld," and he choked a sob. "1 knew it would come! I knew it would. Tell me. dear." "We're to go back—back to Ireland. See. here are the orders," and he show ed her the official letter. She took it wonderingly and read it. Her band dropped to her side. Her head drooped into the snrne position he had found her in. In a moment he was kneeling at ber side. "What is it, dear?" "We can't go. Frank." "We can't go? What are ye sayin", dear?" To Be Continued. IT PAYS TO USE STAR INDEPENDENT WANT ADS. Gila Monster's Bite Causes Death Topeka, Kan., .lan. 22. — Ij. L. 1 >yl Kansas Fish and tiame Warden and w known specialist of fisln culture a animal protection laws, died sudden yesterday afternoon, just ten days a er he had been bitten by an Arizo gila monster. Physicians say liis dea was due to heart disease, possibly oet siontvl by the reptile's bite. LAWYERS' PAPER BOOKS Printed at this office in best, style, lowest prices and on short notice. Cumberland Valley Railroa In Effect May 24. 191*. Trains l.eave HarrUburu— For Winchester and Martlnsburj, 5.03, *7.50 a. m, *3.40 p. m. Kor Hagerstown. Chambersburg a intermediate stations, at *5.03, *T. "11.53 a. ni., *3.40. 5.32. *7.40. 11. p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle a MeclianU-sburg at 9.48 a. m., 2.18. 3.; 0 3ii. 'J.3O p. m. For Dillsburg at 5.03. *7.50 and *ll. a. m., 2.18. *3.40, 5.32. 0.30 p. in. •Dallv. All other trains daily nxc« Sunday.' J H. TONQE. H. A. RIDDLE. G. P. A. Sjpfc BUSINESS OOLLEQBB. aBG,. BUSINESS COWciiE 32U Market Street Fall Term September First DAY AND NICiHT * Big Dividends For You Begin next Monday in Day or Night School SCHOOL OF COMMERC 15 S. Market Sq., Harrisburg, Pa.