PAGE SIX THE CITIZEN, TUESDAY, MAY 6, 1913. HINTS FOR THE BUSY HOUSEWIFE Combination Drawer and Shelf For a Linen Closet. A combination drawer nnd shelf for 11 llnon closet Is much better than a shelf or a drawer, says Popular Me chanics. It la constructed in tho man ner of a drawer, with sides nnd a back, tho front being open and tho ends of the sides cut rounding. A clip Is at tached to tho under sldo of tho bottom, near the front edgo, to provldo a means for pulling out the holder. Sheets, towels, tablecloths, napkins, etc., can bo neatly piled on tho holder nnd can be seen without digging down to tho bottom. It has tho advantage over tho shelf that It can bo pulled out without anything falling off, and tho linen on the back part can bo easily reached as well as that In front. The closet may contain as many holders as ore necessary and should bo provided with a door for keeping out dust. Pudding 8aucee. Orange Sauco. Heat tho whites of three eggs until stiff, odd a cupful of powdered sugar and continue beating. Add tho rind nnd Julco of two oranges and tho julco of a lemon. .Molasses Sauco. A cup of molasses nnd ono nnd one-half tablespoonfuls of butter boiled together flvo minutes. Removo from the heat and add two tablespoonfuls of vinegar. Croam Sauco, Deat together until thick one-quarter of n cupful of thick cream. Add one-third of a cupful of powdered sugar and one-half teaspoon-, ul of vanilla. Foamy Sauce. Cream half a cupful of butter, add a cup of powdered sug ar, an egg, well beaten, and a table spoonful of vanilla. Beat while heat ing over hot wnter. THE National & Grange ttfeoduaUd by CHAKLB8 M. OAKDNBR. Editor of National Oraago, West (WW. Mass.) SLOGAN OF THE GRANGE IN THE WORLD OF SPORT Runner Tabor Thought to Have Big Future. Spaghetti With Meat. Put a teaspoonful of butter Into a frying pan and when hot put In n sliced onion and a clovo of garlic, cut fine, frying to a light brown. Next add ono nound of chuck steak and two or three slices of bacon cut 1 Into short lengths. Let this cook for about five minutes nnd then put in a cupful of canned tomatoes and a few mushrooms. Season with a little salt and paprika and lot all simmer for an hour nnd a half or until tho meat Is soft In tho ineantlmo cook spaghetti by putting Into boiling salted water and cooking twouty minutes. Drain and lay half on a largo platter. Pour over half tho contents of the savory pot and sprinkle a llttlo grated cheesd over all. Add tho remainder of tho spaghetti, cover with tho rest of tho meat and gravy and servo very hot. Cocoanut Cream Pie. Half cupful prepared cocoanut soak ed flvo minutes In two cupfuls of milk, ono egg, ono small cupful of sugar, butter tho size of a walnut, one small tablespoonful of cornstarch. Put the milk and cocoanut over stove In a dou ble toller and when hot stir In the sugar, then tho butter and tho yolk, beaten, nnd a tablespoonful of corn starch dissolved In milk. When cook ed pour into a plo shell previously baked. Put meringo on top, using whlto of egg and a llttlo sugar. Put In oven nnd brown. Jt It "Six Hundred Grangeo In 1913," and Is Being Taken Up All Over Country. The year 1013 bids fair to be the greatest 12 months In all grange his tory, so far as extension of the order is concerned; and a "Grange slogan" has been adopted, which Is being ta ken up by the patrons all over the country "Six hundred Granges . In 1913." Already scores of new ones have been organized in many statos and there are good indications that the ideal of extension thus set up will be realised. In sending forth this slo gan of 1913, National Master Oliver Wilson of Peoria, 111., puts the mat ter squarely up to the patrons of tho country in tho following concise and convincing letter: "The Grange is never satisfied with the past, but is always looking ahead Into tho future and expecting greater, influence than it has done in the past "The year 1912 was a record breaker in things accomplished by the order, but tho present year must exceed it in every particular. How many state masters will take up the slogan and eond it forth to tho membership Six hundred Granges organised in 1913!' Ask Pomona and Subordinate Masters to hand it on to tho membership, also urge deputies to be more active than in the past, and it is done. If each state will but organize five more than they did last year, the work is more than accomplished. Patrons, the work could easily bo doubled if each mem ber would do his full duty. "The farmer is ready for tho Orange, is but waiting for the organiser to come and load tho way. Why Is this true? Because ho has been reading and watching the safe and Bane policy of the Grange, watched Its fights of years ago in having tho commissioner of agriculture raised to a cabinet posi tion, tho pure food laws, tho interstate commerce commission, rural mall de livery, also Its last great triumph, par cel post. The farmer has also watched tho Grange wage its battles against ship subsidy and tho so-called Cana dian reciprocity measure. "It is a well-known fact that tho Grange was vory largely responsible for thoso things, although Bomo aro trying to take the credit away, oven trying to give credit to men for the parcel post law who to the very last opposed tho measure and said it would be worse than nothing. Notwithstand ing this, the Grange moves on in its quiet, dignified mannor, not swerving to tho left or right, but in the open keeps on fighting for tho 'rights of tho American farmer. It Is this that has appealed to the farmer of tho country,, nnd he is now anxious to become a part of this greek organization which in the past has done so much for him. This is why our slogan will be more- than realized. " 'Six hundred Granges for 19131' "OLIVER WILSON, "Master of the National Grange." Beef Tongue, (Herman Style. Cook a beers tonguo until tender and removo tho skin whon half cooled. Prepare a sauce as follows: Boll one half cupful of vinegar, two and a half cupfuls of wator and two tnblespoon fuls of sugar, with one-half cupful of raisins, for ten minutes. Add a dash of salt, thicken with one tablespoonful of cornstarch, rubbed with ono table spoonful of butter and boll rapidly. Cuttho moat in slices. Pour over tho sauco and garnish tho dish with fried eggplant or French fried sweet pota toes. Mush, Western Style. Prepare a thick cornmeal mush, of -whlto meal, cooking it nt least an hour. Hemovo tho rind from tho desired amount of bacon, scald tho slices and fry them until crisp in tho oven; then drain and ktep hot Set tho frying pan on top of tho rango and drop In the mush by spoonfuls, browning on either side. Servo very hot Starching Curtains. Curtains that aro Btarched with flour Will last longer than if ordinary starch la used, bocauso flour docs not rot them tho samo as starch does. Mix three tablespoonfuls of flour to n paste with cold wnter, then pour boiling wa tor on as for ordinary starch. This will bo sufficient for two pairs of cur tains. Danish Pudding. Cook ono cupful of tapioca In a dou ble boiler for ono hour. Whon cold add half a cupful of sugar nnd one tumblorful of currant Jelly. Turn into individual molds or, in ono largo mold nnd servo with whipped cream. Baked Pork Chop. Cover bottom of pan with two inches if dressing, with, chopped onion In it. Put tho chops on top of dressing and almost cover with hot water. Bake until brown. Prominent Grange Leader. One of tho Grange leaders who has come into national prominence the past two years is U. r. Hull of Dlmondale, Mich, lecturer of tho Na tional Grange For several years Mr. Hull has been president of the Amer ican Dairy Farmers' association, and one of the best known institute speak ers in tho country, being in constant demand for big meetings in a score of states. During the past year Mr. Hull has also been elected secretory and exec utive officer of tho National Dairy union, succeeding tho late George M.' Whitaker, who came to that position after a long and honorable service with tho United States government Mr. Hull is putting into his new posi tion his characteristic energy and enthusiasm and to his leadership is largely duo the successful combating' of tho effort in the last congress to break down the dairy protective laws of tho country. Tho National Dairy union has work ed very effectively In connection with the legislative committee of the Na tional Grange, of which Mr. Hull has been a member for two years, and his Boloctlon as its executive officer Is therefore particularly appropriate along any line of dairy protection and promotion, the National Dairy union does constant and offectivo work, and Is a recognized leador. Fow men combine so well tho qualities of offec tivo leadership as does Mr. Hull, and a fooling of greatly increased confi-i denoo now pervades tho dairy inter-, esta, as a result of tho selection of Mr. Hull. Photo by American Proas Association. Not only is Norman Tabor of Brown university expected to bo the next In tercollcgiate one mile champion, but ho stands an excellent chance of break ing the present record of 4 minutes 15 3-5 seconds, bold by John Paul Jones of Cornell. It all depends upon the way in which Tabor runs his race at the intercollegiate championships. That he possesses the speed and tho endurance necessary to accomplish such a feat ho has proved time and again, but Tabor is what is known as an indifferent athlete. Ho likes ath letics, but he is not the kind of runner who leaves the bnrrlor with tho Inten tion of trying to break record's. If he were ho might oven now hold the milt record. Star Pitchers Lacked Control at Start Tho game has few great pitchers who broke into tho big league with control. Ed Walsh, Bill Donovan and even Mathewson wero a wild lot when they stnrted on their major league ca reers. But thoy gradually overcame this failing nnd eventually were num bered among thoso pitchers who are noted for having command of tho ball. Walter Johnson was one of tho few great pitchers who camo into promi nence in possession of control. He. was nblo to get tho ball over the very first day he pitched for tho Nationals, and it is on rare occasions that he is wild. Control seems to have been natural to Walter, Just like his tremendous speed. Tho night he reported to Joe Cantillon in 1007, Cantlllon put this question to tho youngster: "Johnson," asked Joe, "how is your control?" Walter studied awhllo, then answer ed in that characteristic drawl: "I don't know. I never had to use any where I was." MASTER'S SALTS of Valnnblo Heavily Timbered HEAL ESTATE In Partition. Tho undersigned, a Master ap pointed by tho Court of Common Pleas of Susquehanna county to make sale of tho real estato in par tition proceedings between William Main et al. plaintiffs, and Robert H. Rose et al., defendants, will expose to public salo and vendue at tho Court House in Montrose, Pa., on Thursdny, tho 15th' day of May, 1013 at two o'clock p. m., tne following described real estato: FIRST PIECE: Comprising 284 1-4 acres, moro or less. This piece is covered with heavy timber chiefly hemlock, original growth and also a portion of the wa ters and ground thereunder of "Sil ver Lake," one of the most beautiful fresh water lakes in northeastern Pennsylvania, and shore line thereof about three-quarters of a mile, mak ing a very attractive spot for cot tagers, fishing and boating; in the center of tne hill country of Penn sylvanla about 1800 feet above sea level. SECOND PIECE Comprising S05 3-4 acres moro or less. This piece consists almost entirely of very heavy virgin hemlock inter spersed with some pine and hard' wood; one of the most valuable tlm ber tracts of its size in the state of Pennsylvania. Within easy reach of railroad and shipping facilities, being within ten miles of D L. & W. R. R. and L. V. R. R. Any further information desired concerning either tract will be fur nished by the Master, together with map of the tract. JOIIN S. COURTRIGHT, Master. Montrose, Susq'a Co., Pa. A. B. SMITH, Attorney. Montrose, Pa. 1871 ABSOLUTE SECURITY FORTY-TWO YEARS OF SUCCESS 1913 WAYNE COUNTY The Citizen wants a good, live ly correspondent In every village in Wayne county. Will you bo oneT Write this office for particulars. A Great Showing. In a recent inquiry, the fact was brought out that of the 480 uubordl-. dlnato Granges in tho state of Maine, ' more than 90 per cent own and occa-l py their own halL The inventoried property of tho Grange halls and' their oontenta, in the state of Maine, is In excess of a million and a qoar-, ter of dollars. This is a record of hall ownership which tho Grange of no other state can oven approximate, and Is a source of tremendous pride to all the Patrons in the Pine nwt state. As a result of such substantial property ownership, too Granges of Maine are rated among the most sub stantial and most prosperous in the country. Still Hunting For "White Hopes." Crowning Luther McCarty champion white hope has by no means put an end to the hunt for new material. Mc carty's success, on tho contrary, hos given a new Impetus to tho industry of developing white heavyweights. Tho sight of tho raw cowpuncher, who has practically sprung up over night gathering a fortune on tho stage and being showered with big purses has made it apparent that thcro are possibilities in the white hope business even moro enticing thnn gold hunting used to be In the days of the Klondlko rush. Witness, for instance, the fran tic struggle now going on for tho prlvl lego of managing Jess Wlllard, who is expected soon to bo running McCarty a close second In gathering dollars and glory. Roos New Yale Strong Man. W. F. Roos of Hoboken, N. J., is the new "strong man" at Ynle. It was an nounced recently thnt he had broken tho university tost record with a total of 2,005 points. Tho former record of p.400.0 was held by John R. Kllpat rlck, 1011, tho football and track star. Roos is a member of tho Junior class in the scientific school. "Doggie" Trenchard a Coach. Varsity teams of all branches nt the University of North Carolina will be under tho general supervision next year of "Doggie" Trenchard, assistant coach of athletics at Princeton from 1800 to 1000. Trenchard has signed a three year contract to become North Carolina's resident coach. Russian a Fast Skater. In tho international skating races at Christlanla recently tho Russian, Ippoll tow, won tho 5,000 meters contest in 8 tnlnutcs 84 4-10 seconds. Mathloson, tho Norwegian champion, won the 1,500 meters in 2 minutes 221-10 seconds. Football Pays at Chicago. Football is the only sport which is profitable at the Unlvorslty of Chicago, according to an official report The gamo netted $52,000 last year, at a cost of $25,000. Tho total athletic receipts were $07,026 nnd tie expenditures $G0Y 484, SAVINGS BANK HoeiesdaBe. Pa. The Leading Financial Institution of Wayne County THE PROOF We lead In CAPITAL STOCK S 200,000.00 Wo lead in SURPLUS and UNDrV IDED PROFITS 372,862.00 We lead In TOTAL CAPITALIZATION 672,862.00 (Our CAPITALIZATION Is the DEPOSITORS SECURITY) We lead in Deposits 2,463,348.60 We lead in TOTAL RESOURCES 3,040,099.22 This year completes tho FORTY FIRST since tho founding of the WAYNE COUNTY SAVINGS BANK. MANY BANKS have come and gone during that period. PATRONIZE ono that has withstood the TEST of TIME. OFFICERS: W. B. HOLMES, President H. S. SALMON, Cashier A. T. SEARLE, Vice-President W. J. WARD, Asst. Cashier. DIRECTORS: W. B. HOLMES F. P. KIMBLE T. B. CLARK A. T. SEARLE W. F. SUYDAM C. J. SMITH H. J. CONGER H. S. SALMON J. W. FARLEY E. W. GAMMELL Nov. 12, 1912. Advertise in THE CITIZEN GET THESE Money-making Secrets r3 n WH Farm Journal FARM JOURNAL ("cream, not skim milk") is the great little paper published for 36 years in Philadelphia by Wilmer Atkinson. It.js taken and read by more families than any other farm paper in the WORLD. Its four million readers (known as " Our Folks ") are the most intelligc-nt and prosperous country people that grow, and. they always say the Farm Journal helped to make them so. Their potatoes arc larger, their milk tests higher, their hogs weigh more, their fruit brings higher prices, because they read the Farm Journal. Do you know Peter Tumbledown, tho old fellow who won't take the Farm Journal? By showing how NOT to run a farm, Peter makes many prosperous. Nobody can go on reading the Farm Journal and being a Tumbledown too. Many have tried, but all have to quit one or the other. The Farm Journal is bright, brief, "boiled down," practical, full of gumption, cheer and sunshine. It is strong on housekeeping and home-making, a favorite with busy women, full of life and fun for boys and girls. It sparkles with wit, and a happy, sunny spirit. Practical as a plow, readable as a novel. Clean and pure, not a line of fraudulent or nasty advertising. All its advertisers are guaranteed trustworthy. The Farm Journal gives more for the money and puts it in fewer words than any other farm paper. 32 to 80 pages monthly, illustrated. FIVE years (60 issues) for $1.00 only. Less than 3 cents a month. No one-year, two-year or three-year subscriptions taken at any price. this cock properly fieU ? !G "Poultry Secrets1' tells lioiu to carry foivls, and other secrets far more important. The Farm Journal Booklets have sold by hundreds of thousands, and have made a sensation by revealing; the SECETS OF MONEY MAKING in home industry. People all over the country are making money by their methods. POULTRY SECRETS is a collection of discoveries and methods of successful poultrymen. It gives Fetch's famous mating chart, the Curtiss method of getting one-half more pullets than cockerels, Boyer's method of insuring fertility, and priceless secrets of breeding, feeding, how to produce winter eggs, etc. HORSE SECRETS exposes all the methods of "bish- oping," "plugging," cocaine and gasoline doping, and other tricks of "gyps" and swindlers, and enables any one to tell an unsound horse. Gives many valuable training secrets. CORN SECRETS, the great NEW hand-book of Prof. Holden, the "Corn King," shows how to get ten to twenty bushels more per acre of com, rich in protein and the best stock-feeding elements. Pictures make every process plain. EOQ SECRETS tells iiow a familv of six can make hens'tum its table scraps Into a dally supply of fresh eggs. If you have a back-yard, get tins booklet, learn how to use up every scrap of the kitchen waste, and live better at less cost. THE "BUTTER BOOK" tells how seven cows were made to produce half a ton of butter each yer year. (140 pounds is the average). An eye-opener. Get it, weed out your poor cows, and turn the good ones into record-breakers. STRAWBERRY SECRETS is a revelation of the dis coveries and methods of I.. J. Farmer, the famous expert, in growing luscious fall strawberries almost until snow flies. How and when to plant, how to fertilize, how to remove the blossoms, how to get three crops In two jears, etc. GARDEN GOLD shows how to make your backyard supply fresh vegetables and fruit, how to cut down your grocery bills, keen a better table, and get cash for your surplus. How to plant, cujtivate, harvest and market. DUCK DOLLARS tells how the great Weber duck farm near Boston makes every year CO cents eacli on 40,000 duck lings. Tells why ducks pay them better than chickens, and just HOW they do everything. TURKEY SECRETS discloses fully the methods of Horace Vose, the famous Rhode Island "turkey-man," who sup plies the White House Thanksgiving turkeys. It tells how to mate, to set eggs, to hatch, to feed and care for the young, to pre vent sickness, to fatten, and how to make a turkey-ranch PAY. The MILLION EGO-FARM gives the methods by which J. M. Foster made over $18,000 a year, mainly from eggs. All chicken-raisers should learn about the "Rai(Cocas Unit,'' and how Foster FEEDS hens lo produce such quantities of eggs, especially in winter. DRESSMAKING SELF-TAUGHT shows how any Intelligent woman can design nnd make her own clothes, In the height of fashion. The author lias done it since she was a girl. She now has a successful dressmaking establishment and a school of dressmaking Illustrated with diagrams. SHALL I FARM? is a clear, impartial statement of both advantages and drawbacks-of farming, to help those who have to decide this important question. It warns you of dangers, swindles, and mistakes, tells how to start, equipment needed, its cost, chances of success, how to get govenunent aid, etc. These booklets are 6x9 inches, and profusely illustrated. Farm Journal I'OUR lull years, Lfl, fn 1 flft with any one of these booklets . DOlU IOr pl.UV Tin Booldeti r MOT ioH Mprtelf onlf willi Farm JsuruL He sure to say WHICH tootlet you want. What Our Folks Say About F. J. n "I have had more help, encouragement and enjoy- II incm out UI 11 in inm year man 4 um uui ui uun.i ... . years," says C. M. I'ersons. I have sometimes read " It is a queer little paper. It tnrougn ana tnougnt I was none wun u, men jut u up ok'" and fincT something new to interest me," says Alfred Krogh. "Farm Journal is like a bit of sunshine in our home. It Is making a better class of people out of farmers. It was first sent me as a Christmas present, and I think it the choicest present 1 ever received," sas I'. K. LeValley. "We have read your dear little paper for nearly 40 vears. Now we don't live on the farm any more, yet I still have a hankering for the old paper. I feel that I belong to the family, and every page is as dear and familiar as the faces of old friends," says Mrs. B. W. Edwards. "I fear I neglect my business to rend it. I wish it could be In the hands of every farmer in Virginia," says W.S. Cline. "I live in a town where the vard is only 15x 18 feet, but I could not do without the Farm Journal," says Miss Sara Carpenter. "I get lots of books and papers, and put them aside for future reading. The only paper I seem to have in my hands all the time is Farm Journal. I can't finish reading it. Can t you make it less interesting, so I can have a chance at my other papers ? " w rites John Swail. "If I am lonesome, down-hearted, or tired, I go to Farm Journal for comfort, next lo the Bible," says Mabel Dewitt. "Farm Journal has a cheerful vein running through it that makes it a splendid cure for the "blues." Whrii coming home tired in mind and body, I sit down and read It. ar.d It seems to give me new inspiration for life," writes G. E. Halderman. "We have a brother-in-law who loves a joke. We live In Greater New Yoik, and consider ourselves quite citified, so wh?n he sent us the Farm Journal as a New Year's gift we nearly died laughing. 'How to raise hogs' we who only use bacon in glass Jars I 'How to keep cows clean' when we use condensed milk even for rice puddingl 'How lo plant onions' when we never plant anthlng mole fragrant than lilies of the valley. I accepted the gift w ilh thanks, for we are too well-bred to look a gift horse in the mouth. Soon my eye was caught by a beautiful poem. I began to lead It, then when I wanted the I'arm Journal I found my husband deeply interested in an article. Then my oldest son began to ask, 'lias the Farm Journal come yet ?' He is a jeweler, ami hasn't much time for literature; but we find so much Interest and uplift in this fine paper that we appreciate our New Year's gift more and more," writes Ella B. Burkman. "I received 'Com Secrets' and 'Poultrv Secrets,' and consider them worth their weight in gbld," says V. G. Newall. "What your Egg Hook tells would take a beginner years to learn," says Roy Chancy. "Duck Dollars is the best book I ever had on duck ralslng," says F. M. Warnock. "If your other booklets contain ns much valuable Information as the Egg-Book, I would consider them cheap at double the price," says F. W, Mansfield. "I think your Egg-Book is a wonder," says C. P. Shlrey. "The Farm Journal beats them all. Everv issue has reminders and ideas worth a year's subscription," writes T. II. I'ottcr, "One year ago I took another agricultural paper, and it took a whole column to tell what Farm Journal tells in one paragraph," says N, M. Gladwin, "It ought to be in every home where there is a chick, a child, a cow, a cherry, or a cucumber," says I. D. Bordus. WILMER ATKINSON COMPANY, PUBLISHERS FAKM JOURNAL. WASHINGTON SQUARE. PHILADELPHIA. 31