10 KB HOUSEHOLD FLJ TALKS MB! Henrietta D. Grauel A Room for the Children In the average American house there I Is room for everything but the children, the moat precious possession of all. If a room is given to the growing boy it j is usually at the top of the house or in some out of the way corner. While the girls' rooms are made too dainty aud delicate and "pretty' to be of much actual satisfaction to their users. lloiu.es aim to tit individuals for places in the universal life of the race, I ami housekeeping is a success only j when it accomplishes this end. The first tiling that parents wish to guard their children from is contact with as- | Bociations that are not good. Such as j fociation need not be people, especially, i They may be found in untidiness, care less actions in keeping the children's , belongings in order or in rot having a comfortable place for children to ex ercise their natural desires to play and work. Young folks are born imitators so that, models that are not good, whether persous, objects or actions, become dangerous to them. So wise mothers and fathers plan to let their children have their own | part of the home. A place where they can keep their simple little treasures and think and plan and pretend with out interruption, as they love to do. They will say, "This room is all my own, I fixed it myself. Mother showed me." Is there anything else that can give a child such independence of thought and action as to leave the actual work of arranging its very own room to a little girl or boyi Such a room should be for service. The walls should be of some soft shade ( of tan, or buff, for this does not fade as blue or pink does and pictures look well against it. If oile wants it more elaborate, gray, old rose and silver are beautiful. In the border one can have decorations suitable to the tastes of the youngster. The furniture should be made to withstand hard knocks and the / 12 Doses 10c Trial Will Convince U 36 Doses 25c ft, ■ L Igfiwa* At All Druggists For Headaches, Neuralgia Quick —Safe—Sure HOTEL IROQUOIS South Carolina Avenue de 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.OO, $12.00, $15.00 weekly, American plan. Book let and calendar sent tree on request. David P. Rahter Sllaa Wright Chief Clerk Manaeer Calendars of above hotel can also be obtained by applying at Star-In dependent office. Mr. C. F. Welzel Announces that he has opened a new and thoroughly up-to-date Merchant Tailoring Establishment No. 11 South Third Street Prices from $25.00 up—Unsurpassed workmanship. DOEHNE BEER Unrivaled for Purity and Flavor t *1 / A builder of A Tonic strength for businessmen and and flesh overworked persons > Produced by the Master Brewer 1 DOEHNE BREWERY Bell H'M L Order It Independent 318 EVERY HOME Has Its Real Value ® The wants of many business people and home de 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 ; rugs should be of -material that may ' In- easily cleaned. The writing desk is one ot' the importaut articles of fur niture for it teaches young folks les j sons of expression through drawing, paiuting and writing. Over it book shelves may be hung to hold books of worth. Everything that a growing child comes in contact with has an influence upon its character. A young girl grew j up with a desire to be a nurse and noth ' ing her family could say would dissuade her. In later years she attributed her ambition to a picture of a nurse on duty that hung in her room where she saw lit the first thing in the morning and the j last thing at night. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS i "Please repeat directions you gave to prevent embroidery silk from tang ling while it is being used. I clipped the article but mislaid it." Reply.—l do not recollect writing advice on use of silk but I am told that if you will twist the thread, as you draw it through the material it will keep it tight and smooth. • • • "Please tell me some uses for potted |or tinned meats." Reply.—Serve it sliced thin as it comes from can, use it for forcemeat and fillings in pates, for making cro quettes and timbales for creamed meat on toast and for stuffing tomatoes and other vegetables. Excellent in Irish stew. » • In response to request for recipe for cabbage soup I send the following one which is well liked at our house. Bill ings. Reply.—Cream of Cabbage Soup— Chop enough outside leaves of cabbage to make one quart. Add two table spoons of chopped onion and a few chopped stalks of celery, or celery salt to season. Put this in a deep kettle and cover with boiling water and cook slow ly until cabbage is clear and the water about half boiled away. Press all through a vegetable sieve aud add a pint of milk, one tablespoon of butter rubbed into one tablespoon of flour. When thick and smooth take from fire and add black pepper and salt to sea son. Strain again through very fine sieve or cloth. A Great Gift "They say she is splendid in ama j teur theatricals." "She's a wonder. She can make the 1 most painful tragedy a source of gen ' uine amusement."—-Life. | ' Theatres, Railroad Stations, points of interest. S In the Center of Everything | Remodeled Re-decorated —Re- 8 « furnished. European plan. Every S convenience. X Rooms, without bath SI.St X ,\- Rooms, with hath $2.00 Hot and cold running water in all rooms. S J We are especially equipped for < Convention"-. Write for full details. « | WALTON HOTEL CO. | Loan Lake*, Pre>id«t-M«aaf KARRISBTJRG STAR-INDEPENDENT, SATURDAY EVENING, APRIL 10, 1915 raspr SIOPY MAPELW* COPY#/c#rfir rweooAs mrtß/u. ooHPtmr . _ r*vicnoune snooK out nis snort hairy body and came out of the oasis pool into the sunlight and trotted Into the Arabian village Fatou Ann! parched corn in a bra zier before her house. Her house was a mud hut with yellow walls. It had no roof and war open to the sky. Fatou Ann! was ninety years old, straight as a lance —straight as one of the lances the men of the village carried when they went to dispute with white people. These lances with which the men had foueht, had won tnem the last battle. Tney nau been victorious on the field. Fatou Ann! was the grandmother of many men. She had been the mother of many men. Now she parched corn tranquilly, prayerfully. "Allah! that the corn should not burn; Allah! that it should be sweet; Allah! that her men should be al ways successful." She was the fetish of the settle ment. In a single blue garment, her black scrawny breast uncovered, the thin veil that the Fellaheen wear pushed back from her face, her fine eyes were revealed and' she might have been a priestess as she bent over her corn! "Allah! Allah Akbar!" Rather than anything should hap pen to Fatou Annl, the settlement woultj have roasted Its enemies alive, torn them In shreds. Some of them said that she was two hundred years old. There was a charmed ring drawn around her house. People sup posed that If any creature crossed It uninvited. It would fall dead. The sun had risen for an hour and the air was still cool. Overhead, the sky, unstained by a single cloud, was blue as a turquoise floor, and against it, black and portentous, flew the vul tures. Here and there the sun-touched pools gave life and reason to the oasis. Fatou Annl parched her corn. Her barbaric chant was interrupted by a sharp bark and a low pleading whine. She had never heard sounds just like that. The dogs of the village were great wolflike creatures. Pit choune's bark was angelic compared with theirs. He crossed the charmed circle drawn around her house, and did not fall dead, and stood before her, whining. Fatou Anni left her corn, stood upright and looked at Pit choune. To her the Irish terrier was an apparition. The fact that he had not fallen dead proved that he was beloved of Allah. He was, perhaps, a genie, an afrit. Pita'ioune fawned at her feet. She murmured a line of the Koran. It did not seem to affect his demonstrative affection. The woman bent down to him after making a pass against the Evil Eye, and touched him, and Pit choune licked her hand. Fatou Ann! screamed, dropped him, went into the house and made her ablutions. When she came out Plt choune sat patiently before the parched corn, and he again came crawling to her. The Arabian woman lived in the last hut of the village. She could satisfy her curiosity without shocking her neighbors. She bent down to scrutinize Pitchoune's collar. There was a sacred medal on it with sacred inscriptions which she could not read. But as soon as she had freed him this time, Pitchoune tore himself away from her, flew out of the sacred ring and disappeared. The he ran back, barking appeallngly; he took the hem of her dress in his mouth and pulled her. He repeatedly did this and the superstitious Arabian believed herself be called divinely. She cautiously left the doorstep, her veil falling be fore her face, came out of the sacred ring, followed to the edge of the berry field. From there Pitchoune sped over the desert; when he stopped and looked back at her. Fatou Anni did not follow, and he returned to renew his entreaties. When she tried to touch him he escaped, keeping at a safe distance. The village began to stir. Blue and yellow garments flut tered in the streets. "Allah Akbar," Fatou {Anni .mur mured, "these are days of victory, of recompense." She gathered her robe around her and, statellly and impressively, started toward the huts of her grandsons. When she returned, eight young war riors, fully armed, accompanied her. Pitchoune sat beside the parched corn, watching the brazier and her meal. Fatou Anni pointed to the desert She said to the young men, "Go with this genie. There is something he wishes to show us. Allah is great. Go." • •••••• When the Capltaine de Sabron opened his eyes in consciousness, they encountered a square of blazing blue heaven. He weakly put up his hand to shade his sight, and a cotton awning, supported by four bamboo poles, was swiftly raised over his head. He saw objects and took cogni zance of them. On the floor in the low doorway of a mud hut sat three lltttle naked children covered with flies and dirt. He was the guest of Fatou Anni. These were three of her hundred great-great-grandchildren. The babies were playing with a little dog. Sabron knew the dog but could not articulate his name. By his side sat the woman to whom he owed his life. Her veil fell over her face. She was braiding straw. He looked at her intelligently. She brought him a drink of cool water In an earthen ves sel, with the drops oozing from its porous sides. The hut reeked with odors which met. his nostrils at aver* breath he drew. He asked In Arabic: "Where am I?" "In the hut of victory," said Fatou Ann). Pltchoune overheard the voice and came to Sabron's side. His master murmured: "Where are we, my friend?" The dog leaped on his bed and licked his face. Fatou Anni, with a whisk ot straw, swept the flies from him A great weakness spread its wings above bim and he fell asleep. Days are all alike to those who lie In mortal sickness The hours are in tensely colorless and they slip and slip and slip into painful wakefulness, Into fever, into drowsiness finally, and then luto weakness. The CaDitaine de Sabron. althoush he had no family to speak of, did pos sess, unknown to the Marquise d'Es clignac, an old aunt in the provinces, and a handful of heartless cousins who were indifferent to him. Nevertheless he clung to life and in the hut of Fatou Anni fought for existence Every time that he was conscious he struggled anew to hold to the thread of life. Whenever he grasped the thread he vanquished, and whenever he lost It, he went down, down. Fatou Anni cherished him. He was a soldier who had fallen in the battle against her sons and grandsons. He was a man and a strong one, and she despised women He was her prey and he was her reward and she cared for him; as she did so, she became maternal His eyes which, when he was con scious, thanked her; his thin hands that moved on the rough blue robe thrown over him. the devotion of the dog—found a responsive chord In the great-grandmother's heart. Once he smiled at one of the naked, big-bellied great-great-grandchildren Beni Has san, three years old, came up to Sab ron with hip fingers in his mouth and chattered like a bird This proved to Fatou Anni that Sabron had not the Evil Eye. No one but the children were admitted to the hut, but the sun and the flies and the cries of the vil lage came In without permission, and now and then, when the winds arose, he could bear the stirring of the palm trees. Sabron was reduced to skin and bone. His nourishment was. insuffi cient, and the absence of all decent care was slowly taking him to death. It will never be known why he did not die. Pltchoune took to making long ex cursions. He would be absent for days, and in his clouded mind Sabron thought the dog .was reconnoitering for him over the vast pink sea without there —which, if one could sail across as in a ship, one would sail to France, through the walls of mellow old Taras con, to the chateau of good King Rene; one would sail as the moon sails, and through an open window one might hear the sound of a woman's voice singing. The song, ever illusive and Irritating in its persistency, tantalized his sick ears. Sabron did not know that he would have found the chateau shut had he sailed there in the moon. It was as well that he did not know, for his wan dering thought would not have known where to follow, and there was repose In thinking of the Chateau d'Esclig nac. It grew terribly hot. Fatou Anni, by his side, fanned him with a fan she had woven. The great-great-grand children on the floor in the mud fought together. They quarreled over bits of Colored glass. Sabron's breath came panting. Without, he heard the cries of the warriors, the lance-bearers —he heard the cries of Fatou Anni's Bons who were going out to battle. The French soldiers were in a distant part of the Sahara and Fatou Anni's grand children were going out to pillage and destroy. The old woman by his side cried out and beat her breast. Now and then she looked at him curiously, as if she saw death on his pale face. Now that all her sons and grandsons had gone, he was the only man left in the village, as even boys of sixteen had joined the raid. She wiped his forehead and gave him a potion that had been pierced with arrows. It was all she could do for a captive. Toward sundown, for the first time Sabron felt a little better, and after twenty-four houra' absence, Pitchoune It Grew Terribly Hot. whined ai the hut door, but would not come fc. Fatou Anni called on Allah, left hsr patient and went out to see THE REV. "BILLY" WITH JPT / mm HFLB KRAI I!MH : LI WW IHH fir t* ~ mm wi UM m m ; iM I mm -1 raL ill ■ -JjH I# „ iii * : v - ■ - Bp S rj§ m m ' fwm m 4 i IFL ; Bh| I ■ m£m \\B •' - GBOPGE AND \ • " MA " SOHDAV if- Here Is a picture of "Billy" Sunday, taken in Paterson, N. J., where the noted evangelist la against the devil. It shows blui with bis wife, "Ma" Sunday, and his son, George. wnai was ine matter witn tne aog. At the door, in the shade of a palm, stood two Bedouins. It was rare for the caravan to pass by Beni Medlnet The old woman's superstition foresaw danger in this vHsit. Her veil before her face, her gnarled old fingers held the fan with which she had been fanning Sabron. She went out to the strangers. Down by the well a group of girls in gar ments of blue and yellow, with earthen bottles on their heads, stood staring at Benl Medinet's unusual visitors. To Be Continued Makes 01 Feel Like 10 "I suffered with kidney ailment for two years," writes Mrs. M. A. Bridges, Robinson, Mass., "aud commenced tak ing Foley Kidney Pills about ten months ago. I am now able to do all my work without fatigue. I am now 61 years of age aud feel like a 16-vear old girl." Foley Kidney Pills strengthen and invigorate weak, tired anil deranged kidneys; relieve backache, weak back, rheumatism and bladder trouble. They are tonic in action. Geo. A. Gorgas, 16 North Third street.—Adv. LABOR CHIEF STRIKE UMPIRE Is Accepted as Third Member of Board to Settle Dispute Wilkes-Barre, I'a., April 10. —The directors of the Wilkes-Barre Railway Company at a meeting last evening ac cepted John Price Jackson, State Com missioner of Labor and lildustries, as the third member of the arbitration board to settle the wage dispute be tween the traction company and its striking motormen and conductors. The men have been on strike eight days, during which time not a car has moved. Following this iction orders were is sued bv the company and strikers to resume the operation of cars this niorn ing. To Test Constitutionality of Law Ilazleton, April 10. —Court action I attacking the constitutionality of the ! act of 1911, disfranchising the voters of the middle coal field poor district and giving the Judges of Carbon coun ty the power to ap;>cint the Poor Di rectors was ordered by Ilazleton City Council. District Attorney J. H. Bige low was instructed to invite Freland, West Hazleton, Foster and Hazle town ships to join in the case. The Daily Fashion Hint. I *— : ,— i A pretty arrangement of the modish hat streamers Is shown In this model. It Is of a pink hemp, the crown encir ! cled with a wide piped band of blue ribbon the shade of the streamer ends, and a fine wreath of forget-me-nots and roses follows the outside edge of the brim. i Artistic Printing at Star-Independent. TO BORROW PHILADELPHIANS Fifteen Hundred of Them Are Expect ed to Follow Easton Industry Easton, Pa., April 10. —'' Within six months 1,500 men, women and children will have moved from Philadelphia to this city," was the statement, made yesterday bv General Traffic Manager W. 'H. Frederick, of the Taylor-Wharton Iron & Steel Company. The men, heads of families, are now employed in subsidiary plants of the Taylor-Wharton plant in Philadelphia. The big plant is nearing completin, and the hiring of the force to operate it will commence in six or eight weeks. In Jail as Bam. Burners Bellofonte, Pa., April 10.—Deputy State Fire Marshal T .G. Ryan, of l)an ville, probably captured the leaders of a gang of alleged barn-burners when he arrested and landed in the Centre county jail yesterday Edward Ickes, j of Scotia, and Bert Finnegan, of Wil liamsburg, Blair county. They are charged with burning the house and barn of H. A. Ellis, in Bald Eagle Val ley, in February, 1914. Five or six other barns were burned. Tunnel Wreck Halts Traffic Altoona, Pa., April 10. —A break in the air hose resulted ii) the wrecking of ' a freight train in the Pennsy's east bound tunnel at Gallitzin yesterday, and eastbound tratlic over the main line was tied up for tw,> hours. Three cars in the center of the tunnel were derailed and thrown crosswise. AWNINGS Place your order for Awnings I . j with us now, before the rush starts, j Estimates Gladly Given General upholstery, slip covers i I and carpet work done. Jos. Coplinky Successor to H. A. Vollmer . 1208% North Third Street Harrisburg, Pa. v 1 Cumberland Valley Railroad! In Effect May 24. If 11. Train* Leave Hnrrlaburg— For Winchester ixid Martlnsburg. at 5.0J, *7.60 a. m- *3.40 p. m. For Hagerstown, CUamberaburg ana intermediate stations, at *5.03. *7.681 *;l.n3 a. ni.. '3.40. i.Zi. *7.40. 11.0# p. m. Additional trains lor Carllal* ana Mechanlcsburg at *.48 a. m.. 2.1t. *.37. li.io. y.30 p. m. For Dlllsburs at 6.03, *7.60 and a. m„ 2.18. *3.40, 6.32, <.30 p. m. •Dally. All other trains dully •soap' Sunday. J H. TONOB. H. L RIDDLE. Q. P. A gupt BUSINESS COLLEGES f Begin Preparation Now Day and Night Sessions SCHOOL of COMMERCE 15 S. Market Sq., Harrisburg, Pa. HBO. BUSINESS OOLLEOE 320 Market Street Fall Term September First DAY AND NrGHT ! - * ' Directory of Leading HotelM of Harrisburg^H THEPLAZV 423-426 Market St., Harrisburg, Pa At the Entrance to the P. B. B. Station EUROPEAN PLAN F. B. ALDINOEB, Proprietor HOTEL VICTOR No. 25 3outh Fourth Street Directly opposite Lnloa Station, 'Quipped with all Modern Improve meats | running water la every rooni Inc bathi perfectly aaaitaryi nicely (urulshed throughout. Rates moderate, European Plan. JOSEPH QIUSTI, Proprietor. —— Coal Prices Are Lowest Now Thousands of tons of fresh ly mined coal have been re ceived at the, Kelley yards in anticipation of a'rush of orders in consequence of the lowered prices—in many in : stances the saving is 50c a ! ton. Let Kelley fill your bins now for next Winter—get it done before housecleaning. H. M. KELLEY & C | • IN. Third Street Tenth and State Streets $3.00 TO NEW YORK AND RETURN SUNDAY -j Q APRIL lO Special Excursion Train From Lv. A. M. HARRISBURG 3.3d Hummelstown, 3.50 Swatara, 3.55 Hershey, 3.57 Palmyra 4.04 Annville, ✓ 4.13 LEBANON' 4.24 RETURNING —Leave New York from foot West 23d Street 0.50 P. M., foot Liberty Street 7.00 P. M. same day for above stations. ' >,