10 1% 1% 1% Prescription for M II II Eczema ■ ■ ■ IH f»r IS yevt the ttunilurd akin mnwijr a n liquidusnleitrrually mi/onfrrlief fMimitch. Mi f ■■ IM CA AM the mildratof clntnwra —krrps ■ SOdD t*ndrr Kixi tfcio alwaj'l ™ ™ clean aod healthy. ■ HOUSEHOLD TALKS Henrietta D. Grauel Between Seasons To use what one has at hand and pro duce. day after day, palatable attractive meals is not easy. Especially is this so now when it is too early for many spring foods and too late for the win ter one* to be at their best. The eauned ami preserved foods help > to bridge over the seasons. From them many tempting and delicious dishes can be made and none of theiu need to be very costly. An applebutter pie is such a one. This is something no one would think of making if fruit was plentiful, but it needs no apology for it is a good fillinfi for a pastry shell and can be finished with whipped whites of eggs and made as "fancy" as any pie. Indeed apples furnish a solution to many a fruit problem for they offer so many ways of preparation. Haked apples are always fine unless spoiled in the baking, as they sometimes are. Some varieties bake more readily than others but all sorts may be baked if lemon juice is added to them. Remove the core without breaking the fruit, by means of an apple-corer. Kill the hol low with sugar, lemon juice and butter. Vse only moderate heat for if it is TCM» intense the skin of the apples will break and the juice be lost. Haked apples make a pretty dish called Snow Island, when any are left from a meal. Press them through a sieve and sweeten the pulp. To this add the stiff, sweetened whites of eggs . and bent well. Heap a little of the egg white on the very top of the mass and put bright colored fruit jelly on it. Serve with cake. MAUDE ADAMS, WHO APPEARS IN BARRIE S "QUALITY STREET" " ♦ v ;'V' . ' l '.. ♦. . IB Sbt m V jyjjjH HSL - IK J9S A | H&fe- ; wiß Hiiß Mr . Mm Maude Adams was rehearsing her •orapany preparatory to the opening of the season and Charles Frohman was in interested observer. During a lull in the rehearsal the actress walked over to the manager and remarked: "When we have this right I am going to pla.-e 'Quality street' in Rehearsal." This was the first intimation that Mr. Frohman had that Miss Adams con templated bringing Barries early suc cess back before the public. He smiled, ou won't need it," he replied. "Probably not." answered Miss Ad ams, "but I want to do it." Nothing more was said about it and Mr. Froh man knew the thing was settled. He * | FOR RENT PRIVATE ROOMS FOE HOUSEHOLD GOODS FIRE PROOF STORAGE We Invite Your Inspection HARRISBURG STORAGE CO. 437-448 SOUTH SECOND STBEET i - -v Read the Star-Independent Puddings and dumplings help one out of the "what to have for dinner" pnr xle wonderfully for almost any sort of canned fruit or preserved peaches, plums, cherries or berries may be used. Make a light crust similar to biscuit dough. Sweeten it a little if you like, 1 it so. Roll out small pieces and till j with the fruit. Bring the dough up j around it and pinch edges together, then tie each dumpling in a cloth and! drop into boiling water for twenty minutes. When done remove the cloth, send to table on individual plate. Kat with sauce or cream. The dutnpliugs may also be baked or made into pud dings. DAILY MENU Breakfast Baked Apples Creamed Rice Soft Boiled Kggs Bacon Toast Coffee Luncheon Cold Meat. Sliced Mustard Sauce Potatoes Baked in Milk Hot Muffins, Jam Little Cakes, Tea Dinner Clear Vegetable Soup Larded Baked Liver iSteamed Parsnips Potatoes, an <;ratin Chow-chow Celery Salad, Wafers Lemon Meringue Pie has the utmost faith in the judgment of the actress and once in speaking of it ■said that she was always right. "Qual ity Street" was duly placed in rehearsal and everything made ready for its revival. As is known Miss Adams is to be seen in the play on the occasion of her visit at the Majestic Fridav evening. "Quality Street" was the second of the 'Barrie plays given by Miss Adams, the first having been "The Little Minister." It shows Barrie picturing the people in an English village in the long ago and unfolding a love story of charming! sweetness. In the revival Miss Adams will again be seen as Phoebe Throssell. —Adv.* HARRISBURG STAR-INDEPENDENT, TUESDAY EVENING, MARCH 23, 1915. PAMor&cp. HAROLD M/tGWIU®) Aufhorof The Place °f Honeymoons, etc. COPYMJGftr 0Y TH£ OC3AJ-ftBVULL CQWK/lY W CONTIHUiIi) •"Orient. mostly, I suppose. Your letter about the strike In oil was mighty interesting. Heap of money over there. If they'd only let us smart chaps In to dig it up. Now, old man, 1 want you to wipe the slate clear of these ten veara. We'll call It a bad dream. What are your plans for the future?" "Plans?" Warrington looked up blankly. He realized that he had made no plans for the future. "Yes. What do you intend to do? A man like you wasu't made for idle ness. Look here. Paul; I'm not going to beat about the bush. We've got a whopping big contract from the Chi nese government, and we need a man to take charge, a man who knows and understands something of the yellow people. How about a salary of ten thousand a year for two years, to be gin in October?" Warrington twisted the check. Work, rehabilitation. "Could you trust me?" he asked Quietly. "With anything I have in the world. Understand. Paul, there's no philan thropic string to this offer. You've pulled through a devil of a hole. You're a man. 1 should not be holding down this chair If 1 couldn't tell a man at a glance. We were together two months in Peru. I'm familiar with your work. Do you want to know whose portrait that is up there? Well, it's General Chetwood's, the founder bf this con cern, the silent partner. The man who knew kings and potentates and told 'em that they needed bridges in their back yards. This building be longs to his daughter. She convert ed her stock into granite. About a month ago 1 received a letter from her. It directly concerned you. It seems she learned through the consul general at Singapore that you had worked with us. She's like her fa ther, a mighty keen judge of human nature. Frankly, this offer comes through her advices. To satisfy your self, you can give us a surety boud foi fifty thousand. It's not obligatory, however." Elsa Chetwood. She had her fa titer's eyes, and it was this which had drawn his gaze to the portrait. Chet wood; and Arthur had not known any more than he had. What irony! Ten years wasted ... for nothing! Warrington laughed aloud. A weak ness seized him. like that of a man long gone hungry. "Buck up, Paul," warned the good Samaritan. "All this kind of knocks the wind out of you. I know. Cut what I've offered you is in good faith Will you take it?" "Yes." simply. "That's the way to talk. Supposin? you go out to lunch with me? We'll talk it over like old times." "No. 1 haven't seen . . ." "To be sure! I forgot. Do you know v.here they live, your mothei and brother?" "No. 1 expected to ask you." The vlee-presideat scribbled down the address "l believe you'll find them both there, though Arthur, I un derstand, is almost as great a traveler as you are. Of course you want to see them, you poor beggar! The Southwestern will pull you almost up to the door. Alter the reunion, you hike back here, and we'll get down to the meat of the business." "John," said Warrington, huskily, "you're a man." "Oh, piffle! It's not all John. The old man left word that if you ever turned up again to hang on to you. • You were valuable. And there's Miss J Chetwood. If you want to thank any- ' body, thank her." Warrington missed the searching glance, which was not without its touch of envV. "You'd bet ter be off. Hustle back as soon as you can." Elmore offered his hand now. 1 "Gad! but you haven't lost any of your old grip." "I'm a bit dazed. The last sis months have loosened up my nerves." "Nobody's made of iron.' "I'd sound hollow if I tried to say what I feel. I'll be back a week from today." "I'll look for you." As the door closed behind Warring ton. the young millionaire sat down, scowling at a cubby hole in his desk! He presently took out a letter post marked Yohohama. He turned it about in his hands, musingly. Without read ing it (for he knew its contents well), I he thrust it back into the cubby hole Women were out of his sphere. He could build a bridge within a dollar of ) the bid; but he knew nothing about women beyond the fact that they were always desirable. A few monosyllables, a sentence or i two, and then, good day. The average man would have recounted every inci dent of note during those ten years. < He did not admire Warrington any the less for his reticence. It took a strong man to hold himself together under all ' these blows from the hi* and «.* >.• tune's horn. raul was a born engineer; Arinur had entered the office as a makeshift. Paul had taken eight thousand one day, and decamped. Arthur had re funded the sum, and disappeared. El- \ more could not understand, nor could his father. Perhaps some of the truth would now come to light. Somehow, Paul, with hia blond beard and blonder head, his bright eyes, his tan, his big shoulders, somehow Paul was out of date. He did not belong to the times. And Elsa had met him over there; practically ordered (though she had no authority) that he should be given a start anew; that, moreover, she would go his bond to any amount. Pimn* rvlrt wnrlH I Well, he was clad. ! raui wi a man, a big mau, and uiat was the sort needed in the foreign bridge building. He rolled down the top of his desk and left the building. He was in no wood for work. The evening of the third day found Warrington lu the baggage car, feed ing a dilapidated feather-molting bird, who was in a most scandalous tem per. Kajah scattered the seeds about, spurned the banana-tip, tilted the wa ter cup and swashbuckled generally. By and by. above the clack-clack of whoels nnd rails, came a crooning song. The baggageman looked up from his wavbook and lowered hia pipe. He saw tbe little green bird pause and begin to keep time with its bead. It was the Urdu lullaby Jamea used to sing. It never failed to quiet the little parrot. Warrington went back to his Pullman, where the porter greeted him with the information that the next stop would be his. Ten min utes later he stepped from the train, a small kitbag in one hand and the parrot cage in the other. He had come prepared for mistake on the part of the natives. The single Bmart cabman lifted his hat, jumped down from the box, and opened the door. Warrington entered without speaking, The door closed, auj the coupe rolled away briskly. He was perfectly sure of his destination. The cabman had mistaken him for Arthur, It would be better so. There would be no after complications when he de parted on the morrow As the coupe took a turn, he looked out of the win dow. They were entering a driveway, lined on each side of which were chest nuts. Indeed the house was set in the center of a grove of these splendid trees. Warrington went up the broad veranda steps and pulled the old-fash ioned bell cord. He was rather amazed at his utter lack of agitation. He was as calm as if lie were making a call upon a casual acquaintance. His mother and brother, whom he had not seen in ten years! The great oak door drew In, and ho entered unceremonl ously. "Why, Marse A'thuh, I di'n't see yo' go out!" exclaimed the old negro serv ant. "I am not Arthur; I am his brother Paul. Which door?" Pop-eyed, the old negro pointed to a door down the hall. Then he leaned against the banister and caught des perately at the spindles. For the voice was not Arthur's. Warrington opened the door, closed it gently and stood with his back to It. At a desk in the middle of the room sat a man, busy with books. He raised his head. "Arthur, doa't you know me?" "Paul?" The chair overturned: some books thudded dully upon the rug. Arthur lenned with his hands tense upon the desk. Paul sustained the look, his eyes sad and his face pale and grave. CHAPTER XX. He That Was Dead. "Yes. it is I, the unlucky penny; Old Galahad, in flesh and blood and bone. I shouldn't get white over it. Arthur. It isn't worth while. I can see that you haven't changed much, unless it is that your hair is a little paler at the temples. Gray? I'll wager I've a few myself." Thera was a flippancy in his tone that astonished Warrington's own cars, for certainly this light mockery did not come from within. At heart he was sober enough. • To steady the thundering beat of his ! pulse he crossed the room, righted the chair, stacked the books and laid them on the desk. Arthur did not move save to turn his head and to fol low with fascinated gaze his brother's movements. "Now, Arthur, I've only a little while. I can see by your eyes that you are conjuring up all sorts of ter , rible things. But nothing is going to happen. I am going to talk to you; j then I'm going away; and tomorrow It will be easy to convince yourself that you have seen only a ghost Sit down. I'll take this chair at the left." Arthur's hands slid from the desk; in a kind of collapse he sat down. Sud denly he laid his head upon his arms, and a great sigh sent its tremor across his shoulders. Warrington felt his heart swell. The past faded away; his wrongs became vapors. He saw 1 only his brother, the boy he had loved ! so devotedly, Arty, his other self, his scholarly other self. Why blame Ar thur? He, Paul, was the fool. "Doa't take It like that, Arty," he said. The other's hand stretched out blindly toward the voice. "Ah, great God, Paul!" ; "I know! Perhaps I've brooded too much." Warrington crushed the hand in his two strong ones. "The main j fault was mine. I couldn't see tbe | length of my nose. I threw a tempta- I tlon in your way which none but a demigod could have resisted. That I night, when I got your note telling me what you had done, I did a damnably foolish thing. I went to the club bar | and drank heavily. 1 was wild to heln you. but I couldn't see how. At two m the morning I thought I saw the way. Drunken men get Btrange ideas Into their heads. Y»u were the apple of the mother's eyes; I was only her son. No 1 use denying It. She worshiped you; tolerated me. I came back to the house, packed up what I absolutely needed, and took the first train west. It all depended upon what you'd do. You let me go, Arty, old boy. 1 sup pose you were pretty well knocked up, when you learned what 1 bad done. Ana wen you let things drift. It wan only natural. 1 had opened the way for you. Mother, learning that I was a thief, restored the defalcation to save the family honor, which was your future. We were alwaye more or leae hard pressed for funds. 1 did not gamble, but I wasted a lot. The moth er gave us an allowance of five thou sand each. To this 1 managed to add another Ave and you another four. You were always borrowing from me. I never questioned what you did with it 1 would to God 1 had! It would have saved us a lot of trouble." The hand In hla relaxed and slipped from the clasp. "Some of these things will sound bitter, but the heart behind them isn't. So 1 did what I thought to be a great and glorious thing. 1 WHS sober when I reached Chicago. I saw my deed from another angle. Think of it; we could have given our Joint note to mother's bank for the amount. Old Henderson would have discounted it in a second. It was too late. 1 went on. The few hundreds 1 bad gave out. I've been up against It pretty hard. There were times when I envied the pariah dog. But fortune came around one day, knocked, and I let her in. I returned to make a restitution, only to learn that it had been made by you, long ago. A trick of young Klmore's. I shouldn't have como back if 1 could have sent the money." Arthur raised his head and sot up. "Ah, why did you not write? Why did you not let me know where you were? God Is my witness, if there is a cor ner of Uils world unsearched for you. For two years 1 had a man hunting. He gave up. I believed you dead." "Dead? Well, I was in a sense." "You have suffered, but not as 1 have. Always you had before you your great, splendid, foolish sacrifice. I had nothing to buoy me up; there was only the drag of the recollection o( an evil deed, and a moment of pitiful weak ness. The temptation was too groat, Paul." "How did it haDDon?" now does anything like that hap pen? Curiosity drew me first, for at college 1 never played but a few games of bridge. Curiosity, desire, theu the full blaze of the passion. You will never know what that is. Paul. It Is stronger than love, or faith, or honor. God knows I never thought myself weak; at school I was the least im petuous of the two. Everything went, and they cheated me from the start. Roulette and faro. Then I put my hand in the safe. To this day I cannot tell why. I owed nothing to those despica ble thieves, Craig least of all." "Craig. I met him over there. Pum meled him." TO BE CONTIWED One 13 "* Trial Will Convince U :?fl Doses £sc At All Druggists For Headaches. Neuralgia Quick —Safe—Sure V- ■ / Cumberland Valley Railroad In Effect May 24. 1914. Train* l.rav* llarrlabnrs—- For Winchester and M.utlnsburg. ft.lij. *7.01' a. m„ *3.40 p. m. lor liugt rsuivvn. Chumoersburg and .ireimeuiute stations, at *a.o3. *7.5Ql .i .;; *. ni„ •» 4v. u.Sj, •*.■*«, 11.Of p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Utchanicsburg at *.48 a. m.. til, 3.27. . 1 1 . •• u p. m. For DiUsburg LI 5.03, *7.60 and *ll.ll s. m.. 2.15. *3.40. 5.32. ti.3o p. m. •Pally All otbar trains d illy *xcap' Sunday. J H. TONGE. H A. RIDDLE. G. P. A. BUSINESS COLLEGES Begin Preparation Now Day and Night Sessions SCHOOL of COMMERCE !."> S. Market Sq., Harrisburg, Pa. / \ HBG, BUSINESS COLLEGE j ;S2O Market Street Fall Term September First t DAY AND NIGHT j * HOTEL IROQUOIS South Carol/.ia Avenue <£ Beach ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Pleasantly situated, n few steps from Boardwalk. Ideal family hotel Every modern appointment. Many rooms equipped with running Water loo private baths. Table and service most excellent. Hates SIO.OO, 112.00 115.00 weekly, American plan. Book let and calendar sent freij on request David P. Hnlitrr Sllim WrlKht Chief Clerk Manaitrr Calendars of above hotel can also be obtained by applying at Star-In dependent office. ASK FOR-* Lancaster's Favorite Brew RIEKER'S BEER JNO. G. WALL, Agt. Harrisburg, Pa. Frank J. Rieker, Mgr. FEW MINUTES! NO INDIGESTION. GAS SOUR STOMACH—PAPE'S DIAPfPSIN Digests All Foods. Ab sorbs Gases and Stops Fermenta tion at Once Wonder what upset your stomach - which portion of the fowl did the dam age—,|o vou f Well, don't bother. If your stomach is in n revolt; if sour, 1 gassy and upset, and what you just ate Ims fermented into stubborn lumps;! your head dUv.y and aches; In l It'll gases! and acids and eruetate undigested food; breath foul, tongue coated—just take! 50 DEAD IN AVAUMHK British Columbia Snowslide Injures, Half Hundred Others Vancouver, B. C., March 23.—Piftv miners were killed and as many more i injured early yesterday by a snow slide which swept away several bunk houses at the Britannia coal mine at! Howe Sound, B. C., according to a dis patch received here. Besides the bunk liouses part of the mine tramway was carried awav. The mine level is on the side of a I mountain and nearly 5,000 feet above the shore of the sound. The tramway extended from the miue to the beach. ' Soon after reports of the avalanche! were received here a steamship with I physicians and nurses left for llowe! Sound. Communication with the mine i has been cut off and telephone wires' iH'e down. The Codex Sinalticus The most ancient of the New Testa-1 incut manuscripts is the one known as the "Codex Smaiticus,'' published at the expense of Alexander II of If us j sin since the Crimean war. This codex covers nearly the w hole of the Old and | New Testaments and was discovered i in the Convent of Wt. Catherine on Mount Sinai by the celebrated Tischen- j dorf. It is generally ascribed to the i fourth century^ —New York American. | It's Easy to Start the Fire Your fires don't need con stant watching if von burn —• KELLEY'S COAL Why t Because it's easy to start the fires and just as easy to keep them going. Because I it's all pure coal, rich in car bon, uniform in size, even | burning and clean. That's why? H. M.KELLEY&C 1 N. Third Street Tenth and State Streets THE ALE AND BEER produced by the Master Brewer at the DOEHNE Brewery Cannot be surpassed for purity, health, tonic and food qualities. DOEHNE Order lt""Phonos (? n e dep^t3iß ■■■■■■■■■■■l mmm—mmmmt rr 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 i - $ i I'apo's Oispepsin, and in the minutes you will wonder what became of the in digestion and distress. Millions of men and women to-day know that it is need less to have a bad stomach. A little Diapepsin occasionally keeps the stom ach regulated and tliev eat their fa vorite foods without fear. If your stomach doesn't take care of ; your liberal limit without rebellion; if I your food is a damage instead of a help, ; remember the quickest, surest, most harmless relief I.a Pope's Dinpepsin, which costs only fifty cents for a large case at drug stores. It's truly wonder ful—it digests food and sets tilings 1 straight, so gently and easily that it is astonishing. Please don't go on and on with a weak, disordered stomach; it's I so unnecessary.—Adv. I FOE HUSBAND'S DEATH .Jury Awards Widow Damages in Suit Against Coal Company I'ottsville, l'a„ March -I!.—(Mrs. Jo sephine Mochefski, of the village of Mary I), yesterday was awarded sll,l uit l»,v the t.Marv P Coal Company for the | death of Tier hiiiftnnd, who was killed |!\l«y 2!l of last year. | The woman's husband, with five ] other miners, was being hoisted from , the mine when the engineer forgot his ( duly and hoisted them up over a tower, will ere they were crushed to death. Pour of the families of Ihe victims have j now been settled with. STEAMSHIPS. ftYtermuaoT Golf. TcunlN, limit in*. llntliluK, nn«l Cycling Toum I nr. Hotel*, Shore (Excursion*. | l.oufM llntea. Jcrew S. ril'a,!| S ai 'em?nt FaMtVMt. BfWTBt aml only nteuuicr lumU till* piiNtteniMTN nt the dock iu llcrmu«!a | without trnnwfcr by temler. For full luforinutlou upplv to A. R Of TI-HIIHIIHiIC i* CO.. AtfcntM t|nel»c« S. S. Co.. I.tri., .'l2 Hroa»ht«j, >eu York, or an> 'ticket Aueut. 1 I /" Directory of j Leading Hotels of Harrisburg HOTEL VICTOR j No. 25 .South Fourth Street Dlreutljr oppoalta lulun Million. I equipped with all Modern Improve ' .it-ill.: running nnter In every rnoßi but bathi perfectly aanltaryi alt-el? lurulahed throughout. Katea moderate. European rian. JOSEPH GIUSTI, Proprietor. THEPLAZA ; Market St., Harrlsburg, Pa. j At the Entrance to the P. R. B. Station EUROPEAN PLAN F. B. AXDINUEB. Proprietor The Metropolitan Strictly European For something good to eat. Every thing in season. Service the best. ' Prices the lowect. I