10 HOUSEHOLD TALKS Henrietta D. Grauel An Ideal Breakfast Hawthorne in his Children's Tales says an ideal breakfast consists of: Kittle Brook Trout Roasted Potatoes Fresh Eggs Boiled Hot Cakes Syrup Coffee Berries Little brook trout are delicious for any meal and the season for taking them is about here, but it is a culinary sin to have perfect little lisii badly cooked. Broiling produces a fish that shows fish at their best. Little fel lows broil quickly and are full of flavor. If you have a bed of coals for the proeeeß use a wire broiler or toaster. Butter the fleshy side and place it over the fire until it is nicely browned. Turn the broiler over and brown the skin side. This seals both sides so the juices will not escape and you can now finish cooking more slowly. About twelve minutes will be sufficient time to cook little fish well done, as they sheuld always be cooked. If you have no broiler on your gas stove you can use an iron pan and the / \ Digest All Your Food Food that is properly and thoroughly digested will never trou ble you. When food is not digested it gives rise to the formation of gasses which impair the action of the heart, it forms poisonous compounds and upsets the system. DYSPEPSIA PANACEA will put your stomach in shape and help you digest all the food you eat. 50c Forney's Drug Store 420 MARKET STREET v * HOTEL IROQUOIS South Carolina Avenue & Beach ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Pleasantly situated, a few steps from Boardwalk. Ideal family hotel. Every modern appointment. .Many rooms equipped with running water; 100 private baths. Table and service most excellent. Rates SIO.UO, $12.00, $15.00 weekly, American plan. Book let and calendar sent free on request. David P. Knhlfr Mluk Wrliclit Chief Clerk Mnuavcr Calendars of above hotel can also be obtained by applying- at Star-In dependent office. M PRI o the 10c . _ value IOC in a 10c smoke MO JA A All Havana Quality JL XL Made by John C. Herman & Company THE ALE AND BEER produced by the Master Brewer at the DOEHNE Brewery cannot be surpassed" for purity, health, tonic and food qualities. DOEHNE BREWERY Order It-Phones IKSSM 1 CASH FOR YOU Find a purchaser for the article you pos sess and want to sell. If it has value —an advertisement in the Classified columns of THE STAR-INDEPENDENT will get you effective results. ACT WITHOUT DELAY Bell Phone 3280 Independent 245 or 246 oven and get good results. Flatten tlie lisli and season with salt anil pep per. Put just enough butter in the pan to grease it and when it is very hot lay the fish in and slide it into the hot oven beneath the gas flame. Cook the flesh side first, then turn it carefully and cook the skin side. In broiling with an oil stove you must use the baking oven and your own ingenu ity to get the fish brown. It is not easy to do this without drying the fish too much, but it can be done. Spread the cooked fish with butter, sprinkle on a few drops of lemon and serve quickly, on a hot plate. Larger fish are steamed in fish pans that cook them without breaking them. If you have no pan of this sort you can tie the fish in cheesecloth and coo!; it in any shaped steamer. Allow twen ty minutes to each pound, and do not let the water boil hard; it should only simmer. Good sized fish are also fine when stuffed and baked. Whitefish are best planked. Good cooks are pleased when any cold fish remains from a meal, for it makes some of our daintiest dishes. Fish timbales, for instance, are made from any cold fish in this way: Shred the fish and td every cup of it add two tablespoons of incited butter, three fourths of a cup of milk containing two tabespoons of flour, season with salt, pepper, lemon juice and chopped parsley. Beat three eggs, separating the yolks from the whites. Add the former to the above mixture and bent well, then fold in the stiff whites kent l.v. Butter timbale molds and fill almost full of the mixture, set these in a pun of hot water and. bake ten or fifteen minutes. Serve hot with tomato, or lobster sauce, or cold with mayonnaise. Roe croquettes are well liked for breakfast for they are exceedingly deli cate. Cut cooked shad roe in small pieces and add seasoning of salt, pepper, lemon and parsley and mix with cro quette sauce. Shape into little rolls and dip in eggs and cmbs and fry in deep fat. The shad roe or any fish roc is cooked by dropping it into boil ing salted water. VOLCANO SPUTTERS DAILY Lassan Peak Now Erupts Every Morn ing at Daylight Redding, Cal., March 22.—.Lassen Peak again broke forth yesterday at dawn for the third successive morning. The outpouring came from a vent near the mountain's timber line in the Man zanita Lake region, 10 miles from the main crater. At 3 o'clock the main crater began erupting. The volume of smoke from both vents was small, however, in com parison with the huge plume emitted Saturday, and was not so sulphurous, nor so heavily laden with aShfes. The eruption yesterday was the eighty third. HARRISBURG STAR-INDEPENDENT, MONDAY EVENING, MARCH 22. 1915. PAREOT&CQ MOD inCOMTfII ® ) Aufhor <f The The Place °f Honeymoons, etc. m* QOPY/VGfIT CM TH£ QOB&J-/1ZXRILL CQflfWlY IM CONTINUED •misa, child, what is tt?" Marina cried, kneeling beside the bed. "Child, what has happened?" Elsa sat up, Belzed Martha by the shoulders and stared Into the faithful eyes. "Well, I love this man War rington and he loves me. But he has gone. Can't you see? Don't you un derstand? Have you been as blind as 1? He Is Paul Ellison, Arthur's brother, his twin brother. And they obliterated him. It Is Arthur who is the ghost, Martha, the phantom. Ah, I hove caused you a good deal of worry, and I am going to cause you yet more. I am going to Saigon; up and down the world, east and west, until I find him. Shall 1 go alone, or will you go with me?" Then Martha did what ever after en deared her to the heart of the stricken girl—she mothered her. "Elsu, my baby! Of course I shall go with you, always For you could not love any man if he was not worthy." Then followed the strangest quosi doubtless ever made by a woman. From Singapore to Saigon, up to Bangkok, down to Singapore ajrain; to Batavia, over to Hongkong, Shang hai, Pekin, Mairila, Hongkong again, then Yokohama. Patient and hopeful, Elsa followed the bewildering trail. She left behind her many puzzled ho tel managers and booking agents; foi It was not usual for a beautiful young woman to go about the world, inquir ing for a blond man with a parrot. Sometimes she was only a day late. Many cablegrams she sent, but upon her arrival in each port she found that these had not been called for. Over these heart-breaking disappoint ments she uttered no complaint. The world was big and wide; be it never so big and wide, Elsa knew that some day she would find him. In the daytime there was the quest; but. ah! the nights, the interminable hours of inaction, the spaces of time in which she could only lie back and think. Up and down the coasts, across islands, over seas, the Journey took her, until one day in July she found herself upon the pillared veranda of the house in which her mother had been born. CHAPTER XiX. The Two Brothers. From port to port, sometimes not stepping off the boat at all, moody, restless and irritable, Warrington wended his way home. There was nothing surprising in the fact that he never inquired for mail. Who was there to write? Besides, he sought only the obscure hotels, where he was not likely to meet any of his erst while fellow passengers. The mock ery and uselessness of his home-going became more and more apparent as the days slipped by. Often he longed to fly back to the jungles, to James, and leave matters as they were. Here and there, along the way, he Had tried a bit of luxury; but the years of econ omy and frugality had robbed him of the ability to enjoy it. He was going home ... to what? Surely there would be no welcome for him at his Journey's end. He would return alter "I Am Going to My Room." the manner of prodigals in general, not scriptural, to find that he wa» not wanted. Of his own free will he had gone out of their lives. He fought grimly against the thought of Elsa; but he was not strong enough to vanquish the long lngs from his heart and mind. Always when alone she was in fancy with him, now smiling amusedly into his face, now peering down at the phosphores cence seething alongside, now stand ing with her chin uplifted, her eyes half shut, letting the strong winds strike her full In the face. Many a "good-night" he sent over the seas. An incident; that would be all. His first day in New York left him with nothing more than a feeling of foreboding and oppression. The ex pected exhilaration of returning to the city of his birth did not materialize. So used to ouen spaces waa he. to die tances and the circle of horizons, tnmi he knew he no longer belonged to the city with Its Himalayan gorges and canyons, whose torrents were human beings and whose glaciers were the hearts of these. A great loneliness bore down on him. For months he had been drawing familiar pictures, and to find none of these was like com ins nouie to an empty nouse. iu» oiu life was Indeed gone; there were no threads to resume. A hotel stood where his club had been; the house In which he had spent his youth was no more. He wanted to leave the city; and the desire was with difficulty over come. Early the second morning he started downtown to the offices of the Andes Construction company. He was ex traordinarily nervous. Cold Bweat con tinually moistened his palms. Change, change, everywhere change; Trinity was like an old friend. When the taxi cab driver threw off the power and indicated with a jerk of his head a granite shaft that soared up into the blue, Warrington asked: "What place Is this?" "The Andes building, sir. The con struction company occupies the top floor." "Very good," replied Warrington, paying anO the man. F'jm a reliquary of the Dutch, an affair of red brick, four stories high, this monolith had sprung. With a sigh Warrington entered the cavernous doorway and stepped into an "express elevator." When the car arrived at the twenty-second story, Warrington was alone. He paused before the door of the vice-president. He recalled the "old man," thin-lipped, blue-eyed, erup .—l i i i iinii 11 ii| rw li iliM i J* "A Man Like You Wasn't Made for Idleness." tive. It was all very strange, this re quest to make the restitution in per son. Well he would soon learn why. He drew the certified check froir Ills wallet and scrutinized it carefully Twelve thousand, eight hundred dol lars. He replaced it, opened the door and walked in. A boy met him at the railing and briskly inquired his busi ness. "I have an appointment with Mr Elmore. Tell him that Mr. Ellison ii here." The boy returned promptly and slg nilled that Mr. Elmore was at liberty But it was not the "old man" whe looked up from a busy man's desk. If was the son; so far, the one falhlliai face Warrington had seen since his ar rival. There was no hand shaking; there was nothing in evidence or either side to invite it. "Ah! Sit down, Paul. Let no one disturb me for an hour," the young vice-president advised the boy. "Anc close the door as you go out." Warrington sat down; the bridge builder whirled his chair around anc stared at his visitor, not insolently but with kindly curiosity. "Yoifve filled out," was all he said After fully satisfying his eyes, he added: "I dare say you expected tc find father. He's been gone sin years," indicating one of the two pop traits over his desk. It was not at the "old man" War rington looked longest. 'Who Is the other?" he asked. "What? You worked four years with this company and don't recoiled that portrait?" "Frankly, I never noticed it before/ Warrington placed the certified check on the desk. "With Interest," he said The vice-president crackled it, rap his fingers over his smooth chin, fold ed the check and extended it toward the astonished wanderer. "We don't want that, Paul. Whal we wanted was to get you back. There was no other way. Your brother made up the loss the day after you . . went away. There was no scandal Only a few of us in the office knew Never got to the newspapers." It was impossible for Warrington to digest this astounding Information al once. His mind could only repeat the phrases: No scandil, only a few ol us in the office knew, never got to the newspapers For ten years he had hidden himself in wildernesses, avoid ed hotels, read no American newspa pers, never called for mail. Oh, monu mental fool! "And I could have come home al most at once!" he said aloud, address ing the crumpled check In his hand rather than the man in the swivel chair. "Ye«. I bave often wondered where you were, what you were doing. You and your brother were upper-class men. I never knew Arthur vsry well; but yon and I were chummy, after a '-jMon. Arthur was a little too book flsn for my style. Didn't we use to can you Old Galahad? You were always walloping the bullies and taking the weaker chaps under your wing. To me, you were the last man la the fC. AUGHINBAUGH I THE UP-TO-DATE PRINTING PLANT gj 8 J. L. L, KUHN, Secretary-Treasurer R I PRINTING AND BINDING | |jjj Now Located in Our New Modern Building jl | 46 and 48 N. Cameron Street, Nsar Market Street § l| BELL TELEPHONE aoia 4 I Commerical Printing Book Binding k s ; We are prepared with toe necessary equipment Our bindery can and does handle targe edition H; Wbi to take care of any work you may want—card*, work. Job Book Binding of all kinds receives li JO stationery, bill heads, letter heads, programs, our careful attention. SPECIAL INDEXING RR l®sal blanks and business forms of all kinds. and PUNCHING ON SHORT NOTICE. W» fiT hfcfi LINOTYPE COMPOSITION FOR THE TRADE. make BLANK BOOICI THAT LAY FLAT AMD W CO STAY FLAT WHEN OPEN jf; Ly Book Printing With our equipment of Ave linotypes, working PreSS Work ri H cZ , W rt e nl%^ft^BI B NG L °« pr€ss room is on, of the largest and most & yj TIMEF°niTIONWORK complcto in this section of tho state, in addition U M UMES or EDITION WORK. to the automatic feed presses, we have two fa folders which give us the advantage of getting , p| Paper Books a Specialty 016 werk out «*«EDIAGIY u- JO. / Mi N& matter hovr aaal. or how large, the »am« wiU _ , _ ... \' v IM bo produced en short notic* 10 tne y ' > When in tho market for Printing or Binding of pL ffl Ruling auy description, see us before placing your order. fT gie'l - " . mriiitiiii TM. We believe it will be to our MUTUAL benefit. ;.t1 H been equipped the Sest m" No trouble to give or answer g tji.J chinery. No blank is too intricate. Our work !!-' K"*'| in this line is unexcelled, clean an* distinct lines, Rpmpmbpt* 0 ri; no blots or bad lines—that is the kind of ruling that business men of to-day demand. Ruling fox We give you what you want, tho way you want Mri the twle. It, whon you want it. I E AUGHINBAUGH I 46 and 48 N. Cameron Street | tb Near Market Street HARRISBURG, PA. ft m m jfj A Bell Telephone call will bring one of our solicitors. worm ror this business. Moreover, l \ never could understand, nor could fa ther, how you got it, for you were not | an office man. Women and cards, I suppose. Father said that you had the j making of a great engineer. Fierce j place, this old town," waving his hand toward the myriad sparkling roofs and towers and spires. "Have to be strong : and hard-headed to survive it. Built ' anything since you've been away?" "In Cashmir." To have thrown away ! a decade! "Glad you kept your hand in. I dare say you've seen a lot of life." To the young man it was an extremely awk ward interview. "Yes: I've seen life." dnllv TO BE CONTINUED Quick Relief for Coughs. Colds ana' Hoarseness. Clear the Voice—Fine for Speakers and Singers. 25c. GORGAS' DRUG STORES 16 N. Third St. Penna. Station i BUSINESS COLLEGES I r \ ' Begin Preparation Now | Day and Night Sessions | SCHOOL of COMMERCE 15 S. Market Sq., Harrisburg, Pa. J f — —\ HBG. BUSINESS COLLEGE l :$2» Market Street ' Fall Term September First t! DAY AND NIGHT j «■ ' j| STAR-INDEPENDENT CALENDAR FOR 1915 \\ May be had at the business office of the Star-Jndepeudent for 10£ or will be 11 sent to any address in the United States, by mail, for 5 cents extra to cover || cost of package and postage. h The Star-Independent Calendar for 1915 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 tha E; "Old Capitol," built 18*8 and destroyed by fire in 1897. It is in fine half-tona || effect and will be appreciated for its historic talue as well as for its beauty. is Mail orders given prompt attention. Remit 15 cents in stamps, and ad | dress all letters to the STAR-INDEPENDENT i 18-20-22 South Third Street Harrisburg, Pa. ■ ■ I Cornwall and Lebanon Tonnage Increase Lebanon, March 22. —The tonnage | on the Cornwall and Lebanon railroad in the first two months of this year shows a ten per cent, increase in each ; month. Tiiis increase is in comparison I with the same months of last year and are more encouraging when it is con- j sidered that in December, 1914, as compared with the same month in 1913, i there was a 20 per cent, decrease in j gross tonnage. —————— J. Harry Stroup Insurance Agent 1617 North Second St. K —J Stations, pcrtnts of interest. J In the Center of Everything | i Rn-modeled— He-decoratcd—Re- S j y furnished. European plan. Bverjr S I convenience. 8 Rooms, without bath sl.. r »0 X; | Rooms, with bath $2.00 L Hot and cold running j water in all roomM. N \ We nre especially equipped for §5 Conventions. Write for full detnila. © j I WALTON HOTEL CO. | Louis Lukes, President-Mapager It's Easy to Start the Fire Your fires don't need con stant watching if you burn —• KELLEY'S COAL Why? Because it's easy to start the fires and just as easy to keep them going. Because it's all pure coal, rich in car bon, uniform in size, even burning and clean. Thai's why? H. M. KELLEY & CO. 1 N. Third Street Tenth and State Streets Cumberland Valley Railroad In Effect May 24. 1914. Irnlni Li-ave ilnrrinburk— For Winchester Aml Martin tame, it S.US. •T.nU a. ill., *3.40 p m. I'or Haatrstijwu, Chainoeiiburg and uiiei mediate buMiunt. at '5,03, *7.50, .1 a. til., •; iu. 4.33. *i.4U. 11 uf p. m. Ad'lftional trains for Carlisle anil Mechaniesburg ai a.45 a. in.. 2.1». 3.37. . an. u. m. For Dillsburg at 5.03. *7.50 and •11.51 lu m.. 2.18. *3.40, 5.32. ti.ao p. m. •Dally. All otber trains dilly exces# Sunday. J H TONOB. H. A. RIDDL.K. G. V. A.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers