12 ■ HOUSEHOLD TALKS Henrietta D. Grauel Some Considerations Regarding Substitutes and Reductions "It is just as necessary to know what one can do without as to know what one must have when you are making u|> your grocer order, is a remark I heard when a young girl and when I see so many useful and good substitutes for various commodities neglected it does seem as though studying to do without would be a good thing for many of us," says our neighbor. "After all, success in anything is due to the proper use of what one has to do with. Some folks will fail with everything at hand and others will ac complish wonders with so little that we marvel; it is all in the planning, iu having "gumption," "horse-sense" or what an Easterner calls "faculty." This same neighbor has the art of "making things do" down to a fine point. She accounts for this by saying that for years she lived almost out of the world, miles from anywhere and that necessity is a mighty spur towards success, especially whei one knows that failure means discomfort for inauy. Her savings are interesting; for in stance she uses vegetable oils or com pounds for butter in all her cooking. Many of these commercial fats arc ab solutely pure and give just as good results as butter gives. She does not. buy cream, for it is very costly in the city, instead she uses the top milk for coffee and cereals and then, adds a third of a small can of condensed cream to the remaining milk and that makes it fine for cook ing. When whole eggs are called for in recipes it is often possible for her to use only the yolks and save the whites SHERMAN FOR PRESIDENT Illinois Republicans Endorse Senator Who Beat Roger Sullivan Peoria, 111., April 1. —The Republi cans of the Tenth Judicial District, assembled here to nominate candidates for the Circuit Court Judgeship, yes terday endorsed Senator L. Y. Sherman for President of the United States on the Republican ticket in 1916. Senator Sherman last November de feated Roger Sullivan, the Democratic candidate, in a contest for the Senate. In a reply to President Wilson's In dianapolis speech. Senator Sherman de livered a few weeks ago what was said to be the most vigorous arraignment I the Democratic party and Administra tion has met since it went into power j at Washington. Former School Superintendent Dies Mahanoy City, Pa., April 1. —Wil- liam Nerhart, former superintendent of | Mahanoy City public schools, after eighteen years' service, died here yes terday at the age of 6S years. He was a veteran of the Civil war, and was a prisoner in Libby prison. WORDEN PAINT* AND ROOFING CO. H. M. F. WORDEN, Proprietor. Slag, Slate and Tile Roofs, Damp and Water Proof ing, Paints and Roofers' Supplies Genuine Pen Argyl Inlaid Slate for Flat Roofs. I HARRISBURG, PA. STEAMSHIPS. Golf* Tennla. Hontlne. Hathlag, and Cycling Tours Inc. Hotels, Shore Excuralon*. Louesl Ratm. scmw S. S. "BERMUDIAN" 1 Faatent, neweit and only simmer lnnd tnic paiNpngfr* at the dock in llermuda without transfer hy tender. For full information apply to A. R. OtTERBRIDUE A CO.. AuentK (tuehee 1 S. S. Co., Ltd., 32 liroaduay, i\ew York, I or any Ticket Agent. 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 | tySu ■man vi wiii————— ——— 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 |of the eggs for decorating desserts, for j frostings and other things, if milk is added in place of the egg-white. Then she reads the market reports, not the ones made up from retail gro cers but the wholesale market lists, and if she sees that there is a great shipment of pork, poultry or lamb in, and a sudden lowering of prices in this particular food, she plans a meal ac cordingly. The next morning sees her starting toward the public market with her basket on her arm. She buys, not the Vonular cuts, but some of the less known parts. Lambs' kidneys, calves' brains, chicken giblets, pigs' tongues and sweetbreads are often purchased, for these are the. greatest of delicacies and are often overlooked by meat deal ers on public, markets. Just now she talks vigorously about the use of cereals. "Corn bread is fine," she declares, "for a change, but just let some of these club ladies try living on it for a week and they will feel as though the hook worms had got them." It is good though, to call at tention to our cereals, for farmers have been selling corn and other grains for an average of sixty cents a bushel, and buying it back in a fancy carton at I fifteen cents for a quarter of apound, or thirty-six dollars a bushel! "Then there's these brilliant tubes they pre tend are as good as soup, as though soup could be dried out and melted over again, no Ma'am, 1 know what to do without!" Well, one head cannot contain it all and she does give one some good ad vice, if she has not learned to use bouillon cubes in place of stock. 5 TO GRADUATE AT CAMP HILL . Commencement Exercises to Be Held in Methodist Church June t Camp Hill, April 1. —The fifth an nual commencement exercises of the , High school will be held Tuesday, June i 1, in the Methodist Episcopal church. The five members to graduate in this j year 's class are Gertrude Musser and Cassandra Musser, of Washington Heights; Luther Pigler, Gordon Fry and Edith Traub. Violet and gold have been selected as the class colors and the American ! beauty rose the class flower. The motto is, "Not Failure hut Low Aim is | Crime," Lowell. | i Taking Care of the Children No parent would consciously be care less of the children. Joe A. Rozmarin, Clarkson, Nebr., uses Foley's Honey and Tar for his two children for croup, coughs and colds. He says, "We are | never without Foley's Honey and Tar in the house." A distressing cOugh, sleepless nights, and raw, inflamed throat lead to a run-down condition in which the child is not able to resist con tagious or infectious diseases. Foley's Honey and Tar is truly healing and prompt in action. It relieves coughs, colds, croup and whooping cough. Geo. , A. Gorgas, 16 North Third street.— Adv. SENATOR SUED FOR $50,00O 1 lowa Man Asks Damages From Warren, of Wyoming Washington, April 1. —Albert S.: ! Connelly, of towa, yesterday in the I District Supreme Court, brought suit ! against Senator Francis E. Warren, of j Wyoming, for $50,000 damages, charg | ing that the Senator was responsible ! J for his unjust commitment to the Gov ernment hospital for the insane. | Prior to his detention in the hospital . for more than a year Connelly had filed charges with House and Senate commit-1 j tees to the effect that Senator Warren ! | had been guilty of illegal fencing of Government lands in Wyoming. Confesses Killing Police Chief j Elmira, N. Y., April 1. —Edward] Westervelt, held in connection with the j | murder March 23 of Police Chief Fin ! ! nell and Chief of Detectives Gradwell, i | has confessed to flip shooting, accord i ing to the police. • They declare ho has ! expressed his willingness to plead gui!-! | ty, but this cannot be done under the j New York law. HARRISBURG STAR-INDEPENDENT, THURSDAY EVENING, APRIL 1, 1935 mm HAPIEJ/MVO: ccfiYwc/frer we BOBBi-njKKiu ww CONTINUED "I followed tfio tortunes, my dear, | of my husband's cousin through the i engagement in Tonkin. 1 know a little what It was." The girl was immov- 1 able.. Uei aunt felt her rigid by her | side. "1 told you," she murmured, "that a soldier's life was a precarious one." Miss Redmond threw away all dis guise. "Ma tante," she said in a hard voice. "I love him! You must have known it and seen it. I love him! He is becoming my life." As the marquise looked at the girl's face and saw her trembling Hps and | her wide eyds, she renounced her am- | bitions for Julia Redmond. She re- j nounced them with a sigh, but she was a woman of the world, and more than that, a true woman. She remained for a moment in silence, holding Julia's hands. She had followed the campaign of her husband's cousin, a young man with an insignificant title whom she had not married. In this moment she relived again the arrival of the eve ning papers; the dispatches, her hus band's news of his cousin. As she kissed Julia's cheeks a moisture passed over her own eyes, which for many years had shed no tears. "Courage, my dear," she implored, "We will telegraph at once to the minister of war for news." The girl drew a convulsive breath and turned, and leaning both elbows on the piano keys—perhaps in the ' very notes whose music in the little ' song had charmed Sabron —she burst into tears. The marquise rose and passed out of the room to send a man with a dispatch to Tarascon. CHAPTER XIII. One Dog's Day. There must be a real philosophy in | all proverbs. "Every dog has his day" is a significant one. It surely was foi Pltchoune. He had his day. It was a i glorious one, a terrible one, a mentor I able one. and he played his little part I in it. He awoke at the gray dawn, j springing like a flash from the foot ol Sabron's bed, where he lay asleep, in j response to the sound of the reveille I and Sabron sprang up after him. Pitchoune in a few moments was lr the center of real disorder. All lie knew was that he followed his mastei all day long. The dog's knowledge die | not comprehend the fact that not onl> had the native village, of which his master spoke in his letter to Miss Red mond, been destroyed, but that Sab j ron s regiment itself was menaced bj ; a concerted and concentrated attacV from an entire tribe, led by a fanatk j as hotminded and as fierce as tht Mahdi of Sudanese history. Pitchoune followed at the heels ol j his master's horse. So one paid any i attention to him. Heaven knows whj j he was not trampled to death, but he was not.. No one trod on him; no i horse's hoof hit his little wiry fora j that managed in the midst of carnage and death to keep itself secure and his hide whole. He smelt the gunpowder, I he smelt the smoke, sniffed at it, threw up his pretty heed and bnrked 1 puffed and panted, yelped and tore , about and followed He was "not con- j scious of anything but that Sabron was in motion; that Sabron, his be- ; loved master, was in action of some kind or other and he. a soldier's dog, was in action, too. He howled at fierce dark faces, when he saw them. Ho Snarled at the bullets that whis tled around his e&rs and. laying hia little ears back he shook his black muzzle in the very grin of death. Sabron's horse was shot under him, and then Pitchoune saw his master, sprang upon him, and his feelings wero not hurt that no attention was paid him, that not even his name was j called, and as Sabron struggled on, Pitchoune followed. It was his day; j he was fighting the natives; he was part of a battle; he was a soldier's dog! Little by little the cieatures ; and things around him grew fewer, j the smoke cleared and rolled away, 1 there were a few feet of freedom ; around hf n iu which he stood and ; barked; then he was off again cloße to j his master's heels ajid not too .soon I He did not know the blow that strucl j aaoron, Dut he saw htin tail, and tnen j and there came into his canine heart ' some knowledge of the importance ot | hie day. He had raced himself weary, i Every bone in his little body ached | with fatigue. Sabron lay his length on the bed ot j a dried-uc river, one of those phantom ; like channels ot a desert stream whose course runs watery'only certain times ! of the year. Sabron, wounded in the I abdomen, lay on his side Pitchoune i amelled him from head to foot, ad dreßsed himselt to his restoration in his own way. He licked his face and ! hands and ears, sat sentinel at the ue loved head where the forehead was j covered with sweat and blood. He j barked feverishly and to his attentive j ears there came no answer whatso ever, either from the wounded man In the bed of the African river or from the silent plains. Sabron was deserted He had fallen ! and not been missed and his regiment, routed by the Arabs, had been driven ; into retreat Finally the little dog, who knew by instinct that life re mained in his master's body, set him self at work vigorously to awaken a sign of life. He attacked Sabron's shoulder as though it were a prey; he worried him, barked in his ear, strucl; him lightly with his paw, and finally, awakening to dreadful pain, to fever and to Isolation, awakening perhaps to the battle for life, to the attention* :STOY -PAVWALTERS ! or ms inena, tne spam openea nn> : eyes. Sabron's wound was serious, but his body was vigorous, strong and healthy, and his mind more so. There waß a film over it just now. He raised him self with great effort, and in a moment realized where he was and that to 1 linger there was a horrible death. On each side of the river rose an inclined beink. not very high and thickly grown with mimosa bush. This meant to him that beyond it and probably within ! easy reach, there would be shade from the intense and dreadful glare beat ing down upon him, with death in ! every ray. He groaned and Pltchoune's voice answered him. Sabron paid no attention to his dog, did not even call his name. His mind, accustomed to quick decisions and to a matter-of-fact i consideration of life, instantly took its proper course. He must get out of the [ river bed or die there, rot there. What there was before him to do ; was so stupendous an undertaking that | it made him almost unconscious of the pain in his loins. He could not stand, ' could not thoroughly raise himself; but by great and painful effort, bleed ing at every move, he could crawl; he did so, and the sun beat down upon him. Pitchoune walked by his aide, whining, talking to him. encouraging , him, and the spahi, ashen pale, his bright gray uniform ripped and stained, i all alone in the desert, with death above him and death on every hand, crawled, dragged, hitched along out of , the river to the bank, cheered, en ! couraged by his little dog. For a drop of water he would have given—oh, what had he to give? For i a little shade he would have given— about all he had to give had been given to his duty in this engagement i which could never bring him glory, or ' distinction or any renown. The work I of a spahi with a native regiment is i not a very glorious affair. He was | simply an officer who fell doing his j daily work j Pltchoune barked and cried out to I him: "Courage!" "I shall die here at the foot of the i mimosa," Sabron thought; and his j hands hardly had the courage or strength to grasp the first bushes by I which he meant to pull himself up on Pitchoune Smelled Him From Head to Foot. the bank The little dog was close to I him, leaping, springing near him, and Sabrou did not know how tired and thirsty and exhausted his brave little companion was, or that perhaps In that heroic HI tie body there was as much of a soldier's soul as in his own : hurflan fonn. The sun was so hot that it seemed i to sing in the tushes. Its torrid fever I struck on his brown, struck on his chest; why did it not kill him? He ! was not even delirious, and yet the : bushes sang ory and crackling. What was their melody? He knew it. Just ! one melody haunted him always, and 1 now he knew the words: they were a i prayer for safety. ' But," Sabron said aloud, "It is a i prayer to be said at night and not in j the afternoon of an African hell." He began to climb; he pulled him | self along, leaving his track in blood He fainted twice, and the thick j growth held him like the wicker of a cradle, and before he ;ame to his con ! sciousness the sun mg down. Me nnaiiv reached the top of the bank and lay (here panting. Not far distrnt were the, bushes of rose and mimosa flower, and still pant ing. weaker r"d ever weaker, his cour age the only living thing in him, Sab j ron with Pitchoune by his side, dragged himself into healing hands. All that night Sabron was delirious; | his mind traveled far into vague fan tastic countries, led back again, ever ; gently, by a tune, to safety. Every now and then he would real | ize that he was alone on the vast i desert, destined to finish his existence I here, to cease being a human creature ! and to become nothing but carrion. ; Moments of consciousness succeeded | those of mental disorder. Every now and then he would feel Pitchoune i close to his arm. The dog licked his hand and the touch was grateful to the deserted officer. Pitchoune licked his master's cheek and Sabron felt that therejwas another life beside his in the wilderness. Neither dog nor man could long exist, however, with out food or drink and Sabron was growing momentarily weaker. The Frenchman, though a philoso pher, realized how hard it was to die unsatisfied In love, unsatisfied in life. Having accompnsnea notning, naving j wished many things and realised at | an early age only death! Then this point of view changed and the phys ical man was uppermost. ! groaned for water, he groaned tor relief from pain, turned his head from side to Bide, and Pltchoune whined softly. Sabron was not strong enough to speak to him, and their voices, of man and beast, inarticulate, f mingled—both left to die in the open. Then Sabron violently rebelled and cried out in his soul against fate and destiny. He could have cursed the day he was born. Keenly desirous to '■ live, to make his mark and to win everything a man values, why should he be picked and chosen for this lone ly pathetic end? Moreover, he did not wish to suffer like this, to lose his grasp on life, to go on into wilder delirium and to die! He khew enough of injuries to feel sure that his wound alone would not kill him. When he had first dragged himself into the shade he had fainted, and when he came to himself he might have stanched his blood. His wound was hardly bleeding now. It had already died! Fatigue and thirst, fever would finish him, not his hurt. He was too i young to die. With great efTort he raised himself j on his arm and scanned the desert stretching on all sides like a rosy sea. Along the river bank the pale and deli cate blossom and leaf of the mimosa lay like a bluish veil, and the smell of the evening and the smell of the mi mosa flower and the perfumes of the weeds came to him, aromatic and Sweet. Above his head the blue sky was ablaze with stars and directly! over him the evening star hung like a 1 crystal lamp. But there was no beau ty in it for the wounded officer who looked in vain to the dark shadows on the desert that might mean approach ing human life. It would be better to die as he was dying, than to be found by the enemy! The sea of waste rolled unbroken as far as his fading eyes could reach. He sank back with a sigh, not to rise again, and closed his eyes and waited. ! He slept a short, restless, feverish sleep, and in it dreams chaßed one an other like those evoked by a narcotic, 1 but out of them, over and over again came the picture of Julia Redmond, and she sang to him the song whose words were a prayer for the safety i of a loved one during the night. Prom that romantic melody there 1 seemed to rise more solemn ones. He heard the rolling of the organ in the | cathedral in h.s native town, for he j came from Rouen originally, where j there is one of the most beautiful [ cathedrals in the world. The music rolled and rolled and passed over the | desert's face. It seemed to lift his j spirit and to cradle it. Then he breathed his prayers—they took form, ! and in his sleep he repeated the Ave Maria and the Paternoster, and the words rolled and rolled over the j desert's face and the supplication seemed to his feverish mind to mingle with the stars. To Be Continued Tlie llarrisburj; Polyclinic Dispensary j will be open daily except Sunday at 3 p. m., at its new location, Front and Harris streets, for the free treatment of the worthy p< ,u\ 1 IcTeTaughinbaughl a THE UP-TO-DATE PRINTING PLANT < I ' f | J. L. L. KUHN, Secretary-Treasurer 1 PRINTING AND BINDING] [Now Located in Our New Modern Building ■ 46 and 48 N. Cameron Street, Nsar Market Street jfl IBELL TELEPHONE 9019 Commerical Printing Book Binding I We ar« prepared with the necessary equipment Our bindery can and does handle large edition M t0 4 »ke care of any work yon may want—cards, work , Job Bo#k Binding of all kindß receive* fl J J stationery, bill heads, letter heads, programs, our careful attention. SPECIAL INDEXING legal blanks and business forms of all kinds. au( l PUNCHING ON SHORT NOTICE. We \\ LINOTYPE COMPOSITION FOB THE TRADE. BLANK BOOM THAT LAY FLAT AND S J STAY PLAT WHEN OPEN H I Book Printing ; J With enr equipment of five linotypes, working Press Work IjM day and nlgnt, we are in splendid anape to take - -.. . . OH care of book printing—either SINGLE VOL- JSUJCtTitfthu Srtf™ ifJfT <« a fl TTTL'TPfx flp pnTTTnw wftPK • WiDplflto in tnls section of tliG state, in addition UftlEß or EDITION WORK. th e automatic feed presses, we have twe « folders which give us the advantage of getting Paper Books a Specialty Ue werk out ** Mceediagiy quick w** >.m No matter hovr sr.:tl' or how large, the same will v _ ... pU bo produced cn short sotic* TO tne PUDIIU jUH When In the market for Printing or Binding of Ruling wy description, see us before placing your order. f'!M f-r. ~r «... !l In this line la unexcelled, clean an 4 distinct lines, PemcmhAr 1 no blots or bad lines—that Is the kind of ruling ftßureiuuui , j that business men of to-day demand. Ruling for W« give you what you want, the way yon wast fejJf the ttada. It, when you want it. yj IC. AUGHIHBAUGH L 46 and 48 N. Cameron Street 1 Near Market Street HARRISBURG, PA. |j A Bell Telephone call will bring one of our solicitors. H QUAY'S WINS SUIT Son of Late Senator and Trustees of Estate Ordered to Report on Accumulated Funds ißeaver, Pa., April 1. —•Litigation started in the county court last month iu connection with ttie estate of the late United States Senator 'Matthew Stanley Quay by his daughter, Airs. 'Mary Quay Davidson, of Buffalo, resulted in her favor yesterday when Judge Richard *5. Holt made an order requjring Ricihard ! R. Quay, a son of the late Senator, and the Union Trust 'Company, of Pitts burgh, trustees, to file an account within tlhirty days. The petition filed by Mrs. IThividson's attorney asked t'hat a citation be award ed directing the trustees to give an ac counting of funds left under the pro visions of the Senator's will. One sec tion o>f the will provided that Che in come of one-fifth of the estate be paid to a son, A. G. C. Quay, of Beaver, with the stipulation that this amount should not amount to more t'han $4,000 annually. AH in excess of this amount was to be put into the principal trust fund and divided according to the pro visions of the will. Mrs. Davidson, in her petition, asserted that funds ac cumulated in this way had reached sucli proportions that they should be di vided. In their answer to the petition t!ho trustees averred that, by reason of cer tain stipulations of the will, oven if theer are funds to be divided, Mrs. Da vidson woukl not benefit by such di vision, and that she was not entitled to t.he accounting asked. The will left one fifth of the estate to Mrs. Davidson, witfh the stipulation that her husband, I>ouis R. Davidson, in no event should I have aiiy interest in any part of the j principal, profits or income of the es tate. The counsel for t'he Union Trust Com pany took an exception to Judge Holt's' decision in Mrs. Davidson's favor and I it is regarded as probalble that an ap-1 ipeal will be taken. Richard R. Quay, whose home is in Sewickley, a Pitts burgh suburb, declared when Mrs. Da- j vidsoii's suit was filed tihat it was an j amica'ble one. Dt. J. G. Becht's Mother Dies ' Williamsport, Pa., April 1. —Mrs. I Catherine Kober Becht, widow of Jacob 1 Becht and mother of Dr. J. George! Becht, secretary of the State Board of ! Education, died last evening at Mon- I toursville. Dr. Becht was on a trip to Savannah, Ga., with Congressman Ed gar R. Kiess, when a telegram telling him that his mother was seriously ill intercepted him at Pinehurst, N. C. r \ „ 12 Doses 10c Trial Will Convince U :m Doses 25 c At All Druggists For Headaches, Neuralgia Quick —Safe—Sure *■ * For Dandruff, we recommend A "93" HairTonlc^ George A. Gorgas 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 privato baths. Table and service most excellent, ltates SIO.OO, sl2 00 sls .00 weekly, American plan. Book- I] let and calendar sent free on request. David P. Hiiliter Silas Wright I „ , ch,r » Clerk Mannxer I Calendars of above hotel can also be- 1 ! obtained by applying 'at Star-In- | dependent otflce. I ■** BUSINESS COLLEGES t \ Begin Preparation Now Day and Night Sessions SCHOOL of COMMERCE. 15 S. Market Sq., Harrisburg, Pa. / X IHBG. BUSINESS COLLEGE , 320 Market Street ! Fall Term September First { DAY AND N7.GHT 1 V * f— . < ■ Directory of Leading Hotels of Harrisburg HOTEL VICTOR No. 25 oouth Fouxtb Street Uirec-Uy nppunitr Union Statins. 1 equipped nlth all Modi-ru luprotp. atenia; runuiuic niitfr In every ruant Hut- buth; perfectly aunltaryi ulerly tuiul.lieil Ihrutiuliout. Ratra modi-mi,.. Uuroiirao I'lan. JOSEPH UIUSII, Proprietor. THEPLAZA 12;t-425 Market St., Harrisburg, Fa. At the Entrance to the P. R. K. Station EUBOFEAN PLAN r. B. ALDINGEB, Proprietor Cumberland Valley Railroad In Effect May 24, 1914. 1 rains Leave liarriaburs— For Winchester And Martlnsburj, a* 5.03, *7.50 a. m., "3.40 p. m. For Hagerstown, Chambersburg ani intermediate stations, at '5.03, •7.50, .1J.3 a. m.. -t.40. 6.32, •7.40. 11.04 p. m. Additional trains for Carllale and Mechanlcsburg at 8.48 a. m.. 2.15. $.27. ■j.3o, 0.30 p. m. For Dillsbuig at 5.03, *7.50 and *ll.ll a. m„ 2.15. *3.40, 5.32, 6.30 p. m. •Daily. All other trains dully except Sunday. J H. TONGB. H. A. RIDDUB. a. P. A. aupt.