12 EI HOUSEHOLD I TALKS Henrietta D. Grauel Porch Furniture The "flxin' up" idea is absorbing much of our attention as warm weather approaches and it should not be con fined entirely to the interior of our houses. The outside should be made as attractive as possible and a reasonable amount of work in yard and oil porches will give large returns in comfort. If a porch is too sunny the thing to do is to arrange shade by the use of vines, awnings or bamboo curtains. These are not costly and, in the city, answer two purposes, giving both shade and privacy. Hand made rugs arc charming (or summer use on porch and in summer cot tages. It is surprising more women do not take up this useful, fascinating handiwork. The necessary utensils and dyes are not expensive to buy nor com plicated to use. AVhatever sort of rug you decide on should be in harmony with the re mainder of the furniture, else your porch will look like a junk shop. As willow furniture is very light to move about, easy to dust and wears for a generation it is the most practical. With it the Japanese matting may be used and the effect will be cool iii the hottest weather. To prolong the life of any rug that must be taken up frequently it is a good idea to sew four small brass rings to the four corners of the rug. These HHBHnmin l nHHBHHHI Buy Next Winter's Coal Supply Now Coal is cheaper MOW. In fact coal is at its lowest level! of the year. The new price schedule went into effect April 1. Save a ton on many kinds of Kelley Coal. Order now and have your! bins filled before house j cleaning. H. M. KELLEY 1 N. Third Strfeet Tenth and State Streets i_ I The most popular lOcsmoke in Harrisburg is j MOJA Because it is all Havana quality blended so perfectly that it satisfies any taste—strong or mild by John C. Herman & \ DOEHNE BEER * Unrivaled for Purity and Flavor \ t > A builder of A Tonic strength for businessmen and and flesh overworked persons • ' - Produced by the Master Brewer DOEHNE BREWERY Bell 828 L Order It Independent :JlB EVERY HOME , Has Its Real Value The wants of many business people and home de- i mands are realized by its use. Let us act for and ' with you—now. Call at our office or ! Bell Phone 3280 Independent 245* or 246 I "i' f rings are three cents a dozen. Now put r two screw-hooks in a convenient place - !on the porch wall exactly as far apart r j fts the ring is wide. When you wish to i i wash or sweep the porch you fold the , rug together and place two rings over ( each hook. Thus there is no need of rolling a rug or of carrying it from place to place, r Willow furniture may be cleaned » with a coarse brush dipped in strong . salt water, this strengthens the fibre , and prevents it turning yellow. It is : not difficult to revarniah willow. How ever, if it has never been painted or • varnished, but is a natural rough finish, - you can use a dye on .it of any shade i and obtain beautiful results. You can ; also brush hot dve over matting, when I it is worn, and it will take up the color • at once and look quite new. I QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS "Is it a good plan to warm butter for | cake baking in preference to creaming II itf Some of my friends think lam too • particular about making it creamy. Bride." , j Reply.—One can hardly be too par , j ticular about baking a nice cake and it j does not take very long for the cream ing process. You can shorten the work bv heating the mixing bowl a little 11 but do not heat thfe butter until it , i runs. I» t * "Please tell me what is meant by cooking en casserole. Bee." Reply.—Anything cooked in sin earthen ware dish with a cover may be said to be so cooked. A casserole is a covered baking dish. This method of cooking is vfery good and well worth your attention. Dyspepsia Panacea j Will aid in restoring the digestive I j organs to a normal condition, so that j you can later get along without it. 1 You eat because you like to and j because you expect to get nourish- J ment. strength and stability from j j what you eat. 3»c Forney's Drug Store •120 MARKET STREET HARBISBURG STAR-INDEPENDENT, WEDNESDAY EVENING, APRIL 7, 1915. mm MY ILLUSTRATIONS capY*/c#ror mzoobbs-n^niu^^fy^ CONTINUED When Tremont, with great hesita : tlon, took a few steps away from them and she stood face to face with 1 the creature who had been with Sab ron and seen him fall, she said earn -1 estly: . j "Now apeak without reserve. Tell \ me everything." The face of the man wag trans formed. He became human, devoted, ardent. "Excellency," he said swiftly In his halting. French, "J love Monsieur le Capltalne. He was so kind and such a brave soldier. I want to go to find Monsieur le Capltaine, but I am 111 and too weak to walk. I believe I know where he is want to go." The girl breathed: "Oh, can it be possible that what you say Is true, Hammet AbouT Would you really go If you could?" The man made, with a graceful gesture of his hand, a map In the air. "It was like this?" he said; "I think he drew himself up the bank. I followed the track of his blood. I was too weak to go any farther, Ex cellency." "And how could you go now?" she asked. "By caravan, like a merchant, se cretly. I would find him." Julia Redmond put out a slim hand, white as a gardenia. The native lift ed It and touched his forehead with It. "Hammet Abou," she said, "go away for tonight and come tomorrow —we will see you." And without waiting to speak again to Monsieur de Tremont, the native slid away out of the garden like a shadow, as though his limbs were not weak with disease and his breast shattered by •i Monsieur de Tremont had N ' once around the garden, keep ins his eyes nevertheless on the group, he came back toward Julia Redmond, but not qillckly enough, for she ran up the stairs and into the house with Sabron's packet In her hand. CHAPTER XVIII. Two Lovely Women. There was music at the Villa des Rougalnvllleas. Miss Redmond sang; not "Good-night, God Keep You Safe," but other thlngß. Ever since her talk with Hammet Abou she had been, If not gay. In good spirits, more like her old self, and the Marquise d'Escllg nac began to think that the image of Charles de Sabron had not been cut too deeply upon her mind. The mar quise, from the lounge in the shadow of the room, enjoyed the picture (Sabron would not have added It to his collection) of her niece at the piano and the Due de Tremont by her side. The Comtesse de la Maine sat I In a little shadow of her own, musing and enjoying the picture of the Due de Tremont and Miss Redmond very indifferently. She did not sing; she had no parlor accomplishments. She was poor, a widow, and had a child. She was not a brilliant match. From where he stood, Tremont could see the Comtesse de la Maine in her little shadow, the oriental decorations i background to her ' slight Parisian figure, and a little out of the shadow, the bright aigret in her hair danced, shaking its sparkles : of fire. She looked infinitely sad and infinitely appealing. One bare arm was along the back of her lounge. She I leaned her head upon her hand. After a few moments the Due de ! Tremont quietly left the piano and ) Miss Redmond, and went and sat | down beside the Comtesse de la Maine, who, in order to make a place j for him, moved out of the shadow. Julia, one after another, played songs she loved, keeping her fingers resolutely from the notes that wanted to run into a single song, the music, the song that linked her to the man whose life had become a mystery. She glanced at the Due de Tremont and the Comtesse de la Maine. She glanced at her aunt, patting Mimi, who, freshly washed, adorned by pale blue ribbon, looked disdainful and princely, and with passion and feeling she began to .sing the song that seemed to reach beyond the tawdry room of the villa In Algiers, and to go into the desert, trying in sweet in tensity to speak and to comfort, and as she sat so singing to one man, Sabron would have adored adding that picture to his collection. The servant came up to the mar quise and gave her a message. The lady rose, beckoned Tremont to fol low her, and went out on the veranda, followed by Mimi. Julia stopped play ing and went over to the Comtesse de la Maine. "W here have my aunt and Monsieur de Tremont gone, Madame?" "To see someone who has come to suggest a camel excursion, I believe." "He chooses a curious hour." "Everything is curious in the East. Mademoiselle," returned the com tesse. , "I feel as though my own life were turned upside down." "We are not far enough in the East for that," smiled Julia Redmond. She regarded the cqmtesse with her frank girlish scrutiny. There was in it a fine truthfulness and utter disregard of all the barriers that long epochs of etiquette put between souls. Julia Redmond knew nothing of French society and of the deference due to the arts of the old worid. She knew, perhaps, very little of anything. She was young I | our exclusive Rengo Belt / 1® \ YVV * \ I DFKlftn feature which has straight- j \\\ \ \ / RFIT ened the abdominal line with j 'jQI \ \ \/ ! BILT ; perfect comfort. \\ ;i 'A- -i— \ / FEATURE The results that can be xLPP^iy ( |JPp^ Tp r- —ELASTIC !| accomplished with these ' IF WEBBING garments cannot be dupli cated with any other corsets made m America. Boned throughout with double watch-spring steels, guaranteed not to rust. For Sale By Dives, Pomeroy & Slewart Prices $2.00, $3.00 and $5.00 FIKE THREATENS VILLAGE Spark From Sawmill Engine Causes Blaze in Lancaster County Lebanon, April 7. —A spark from a stationary engine in Morris' Hoi linger's sawmill caused a fire yesterday after noon in White Oak, Lancaster county, near the Lebanon county line, that might have resulted in the destruction of the entire town but for the combined efforts ot' its populace to confine it to the district that was affected. A squad of men hurried to Penryn and returned with a steam fire engine anil u steady stream was secured from a nearby brook. The fire started short ly after noon and was not entirely out until late in the day. Lumber iii the Hollinger mill smouldered four hours after t'he danger had been past. II 1 I I "Hi I l 111 111 1111 ■mi || mil 9 HOTEL !•: 1 WOODWARD I R JYZw t jj I Id* to b* within NIT r*acb of tlw [jj jj o'l 'ftllroad at* MOM. nodal abopnlnr H w H | ■od drmmatle emtrva. 1 Fwtt rU U 3 ffl PwntrlfinU Station tali* Seventh 9 [J « Ar*nu# und r*t off ®t Mtb ;( ft jj 6 waft Mr*nt* »t#o« i ff jj | ' Qranri Centra! Termtaal r 1 U 3 ftrnftriwav of* j fl > |i •» H»» Horn RATES 1 |] Without hath. Iroß lI.M I | With h*th. from 112 Hlnfflr | ■ With hath, tram double I ■ r O GREMN L H. BINOHAM | I *"**• Uiunr STAR-INDEPENDENT CALENDAR FOR 1915 May be had at the business office of the Stai'-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 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 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. Pipe Organ Dedicated at Marietta Marietta. April 7.—The pipe organ [ dedication and recital was held yester-1 day in the St. John 's Lutheran church. Prof. Ralph P. Jones, of Wilkes Barre, J was the organist. Mrs. George A. Shil-1 low, a former member of the church, j was the soloist. T'he pastor, t'he Rev. j Joseph I). Kront, assisted by a number I of visiting clergymen, took part. The | organ is of the Mohler design and Mrs. | Susan one of the oldest mem bers of the congregation, was the' donor. Quick Relief lor Coughs, Colds ana Hoarseness. Clear the Voice—Fine for Speakers and Singers. 35c. GORGAS' DRUG STORES 16 N. Third St. Penua. Station (Hi Z.oca| R Theatres. Railroad | Stations, points of Interest. \ In the Center of Everything | Rc-modeled He-decorated —He- § | furnished. European plan. Every N convenience. S Rooms, without bath 11.5 i Rooms, with bath 12.00 ! N Hot and cold running § j water In all rooms. x We are especially equipped for § \ Conventions. Write for full details. sj WALTON HOTEL CO. 1 Loais Lakes, Prcaidcnt-Maaac BUSINESS COLLEGES / Begin Preparation Now Day and Night Sessions SCHOOL of COMMERCE 15 S. Market Sq., Ilarrisburg, Pa. i HBG. BUSINESS COLLEGE 32» Market Street Fall Term September First DAY AND NrGHT | / Cumberland Valley JRailroad In Effect May 24. 1914. Trains Leave tlurriaUurit— For Winchester and Martlnsburg, at 6.05. *1.60 a, m„ '3.40 p. m. For Hagerstown, Chambersburg an 4 intermediate stations, at *5.03, *7.50 L -: i.r.a a. nu. * a io. 6.32. *1.49. n.oi p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Mechanlcsburg at 9.48 a. m. 2.18. 2.27, 3U. 9..50 o. m. For Dillsburg at 5.03, *7.89 and *ll.ll a. m.. 2.18. *3.40, G. 32. 6.30 p. m. ■Dally All other trains daily except Sunday. J & TONOB, H. A. RIDDLE. Q. P. A. Huou