ee scores ese eme———— t By SYNOPSIS On a certain Monday morning he Colfax BooKkplate AGNES MILLER WNU Service ® by The Century Ceo, «THE PATTON COURIER TOMATO ASPIC OR JELLY AIDS SALAD Vitamines Contained Are The bookpiute was exactly as 1 had Important in the Diet. placed jt. 1 took j Fugain in trepida- —— tio Ti . ols it off ug An in trepida (Prepared by tne United States Department on, 'e key was in its hiding place. of Agriculture.) Miss Constance Fuller, seller of rare books *at Darrow's Book- shop, New York, notices that the first customer is a dignified old gentleman, who saunters Into If you don’t want ro wait.” taining a Colfax bookplate. Sud- denly a girl's shriek of *“Mur- der!” rings out. The elderly cus- tomer is on the floor unconscious, with his right wrist slashed. Just before the shrieking girl falls in a faint, she calls out to eter: “Ke it! Kee it for pli PanaE Sherer Wy be- return the book in plenty of time fo gan that morning working at that. Darrow’s. Nancy tells Constance of her elopement with Brandon Tower, an elopement which was cut short when Tower attempted to make off with Nancy's suit- case, Constance explains Dar- row’s card-index system to Cap- tain Ashland, a nephew of Mr. Darrow’'s. They examine the book Peter paid $510 for and find the bookplate to be a forgery. Constance is asked to assist De- tective Almy in his investigation of the murder of the elderly gen- tleman The girl who fainted. Julia Grosvenor, turns out to be ance. Then I took it to Mr. Case, an atmosphere, and Wilkes bearing down on me. “I'd never have interrupted, dear, 1 catalogue!” she ‘cooed. Well, if you insist. Yes, dear from the old law book and dis- covers a small key secreted in a ¥ + : p Lolo on the tur She makes first time the previous afternoon, “Well, he saw that a certain old law other discoveries, too. call it—was bought for us in Rich- CHAPTER VIII—Continued mond last week. You know it, do —-—10 you? Well, he wants to buy it, right away, and without fail. This morning he sent me this check for two hun- dred dollars—" she produced one drawn on a perfectly good bank, and signed Wilmer Ponsonby Juddes—*so I might get it for him ar once.” “No price has been set on it yet,” I remarked. “You'll have to ask Mr. Case about it.” “Why, 1 did, dear. But Mr. Case says he has no orders from Mr. Dar- “That's good,” sald ‘he, * 3y the way, Mr. Darrow went up to his West- chester place last night for the week- end, instead of tonight as usnal, and won't be here until Monday. He's en- tertaining Captain Ashland. So have no fears that you'll he checked ap in the middle of the catalogue.” So the head of the house was gone; and Captain Ashland, excellent crea- ture, was gone; and Peter, fundamen- row, and Mr. Darrow won't be here tally sound and always set to go off. until Monday, so what am 1 to do?” despite his imperfect nature. vas “l don't see that anything's your gone. Were there ne righteous men fault,” said I, profoundly weary. “Any- left? Where was Mr. Roberts? how, Mr. Darrow’s last orders are thar [ was to learn. Just as Mr. Case the book is to be advertised in this breathed his glad tidings into my ear. | catalogue. Too bad, but your cousin Miss Wilkes entered. will just have to take his chance with “You took dreadfully tired, dear,” | other customers,” she remarked. stopping at my desk, “But you see.” pursued Miss Wilkes, though | was sure | was not the at- “1 gave him my word Wednesday that traction. “What a shame you have I would try to see about the book such a rush with the eatalogue! Out- next day. | sent down an inquiry rageous, I call it, for printers to think about it to Mr. Case by that trouble of striking. 1 wonder what working Some rattlepated little Miss Burton men are coming to, sometimes, don't yesterday afternoon, and this morning You, Mr. Case? Gracious, you look she tells be she overlooked giving the dreadfully tired, yourself!” message. | am most dreadfully put “Sometimes 1 wonder what we're all | ony by her stupidity, for if she had coming to.” responded Mr. Case, with delivered the message, Mr. Case could plaintive restraint. easily have asked Mr. Darrow to fix “That really puts it much better! the price, and I am sure two hundred By the way, how did little Mis would have put a reserve on it, any- Burton get along last evening, Miss | way,” Fuller? 1 was sorry 1 was unable to Gracious powers! Mr. Darrow would send you one of my more experienced | have wept hot salt tears on the girls.” learned neck of Magistrate Juddes for far less than that sum! I had no time to gape again at “I am glad to hear she filled in ac. | Nancy's curious conduct, for Miss ceptably in the emergency,” declared | Wilkes added plaintively : Miss Wilkes, very crossly, “because “And so I'm in a quandary! My I must speak to Mr. Roberts about her | cousin Magistrate Juddes is entertain today. Tomorrow her first week will | ing Congressman Sturgis in his home he up, and to me she hardly seems to | here over this week-end! Now, what be the material gne makes a stenog- | do you suppose would be just the thing apher out of.” to do for him?” “1 couldn't have wanted anyone better,” said L i ’ : . “Qraock cos oe Es “1 agree with you,” said I; “she'll Stock exchange . . '. Fifth ve go much further.” nue Grant’s tomb . . . Pea cock alley . follies . . . supper Mr. Case rushed courageously be- ack: alley I es uppe | desk, and I'll bring it to you directly. over the key, pressing it down until it presented exactly its original appear- | wife and 1 have been as one sister a | with another. | wish to see them told him 1 still ‘had to write the no- prosper, with all my heart. They ex tices for book and plate as Mr. Dar- row had ordered. He said he would tracted condition, | was not reassured i 3 Q De » by feeling a rhythmical swaying in the | some time in a useful way." perceiving Miss Having from childhood had an in- I'd known you were still doing that “Mercy, f{t does take you a long time, doesn’t it? you can help me. Such trouble as } am in! You see, my cousin Magistrate | noon at a tea-dance. But my sense of J 2S—you'v i his granddaughter. She can Juddes—you’ve beard of him, of throw no light on the mystery. course? Constance removes the bookplate “Oh, 'ybs!” | . had; Naney had brought hin to my attention for the book—~€larihew’s ‘Notes,’ | think they It was a safe bet that no man alive | instant.” tense interest in fossil vertebrates, 1 | have always thought it would; be rather pléasant to be a curator of such objects in the National museum. especially if I could do some intrigu- - | ing on the side with a handsome young Arvenian diplomat every after “Clarihew’s ‘Notes’; Good Heavens, What Shall We Do?” duty was such that 1 passed up the chance without a quiver, firmly con- vinced that this new Virginian must be a further sort of Caucasian in he woodpile. “Miss Wilkes,” | said more firmly than sweetly, “what authority have I to give you that book?” “Why, I'm a responsible, confiden- tial executive here!” boomed the af. fronted Miss Wilkes. “Mr. Darrow would let me bave. it in a minute)” I knew that only too well. said: “But he’s not here.” “You refuse to entrust fit tem porarily to me, to show a prospective customer who has made a heavy de- posit as evidence of good faith?” “Right,” said 1, succinctly. “Miss Fuller, this is nothing bur Spite of long standing; nothing but your everlasting conceit 1” She was gone, mortally offended, as the climax to a record morning, Had L. after all, lost a good sale? How would 1 explain . . . anything . , . to Mr. Darrow? | certainly had not “tip. ished the catalogue. And for what purpose had | lent the Clarihew to lo in Chinatown,” 1 hazarded, but Miss Wilkes gasped as if 1 had laid down my hand on the Ark. “My dear Miss Fuller! You don’t know who Congressman Sturgis is! He is a Sturgis of Sturgis in Sturgis county—" “Virginia!” | shrieked in despera tion, hitting my faithful desk an un- called-for whack. “For Pete's sake! Don’t tell me!” Miss Wilkes looked considerably astonished, and 1 didn’t Case. not unnaturally bewildered. blame her, for the effect 'on my nerves And there was the book right on the of learning that another representa- desk! There was one way to save the | tive from the Mother ot Presidents situation -by foolhardiness. 3efore | was trailing that lawbook must have any explanation could be begun. | been a sight to see. I apologized. *] hounded to my feet and hurled mpy- | see I'm right. I just have indigestion self on two young damsels who were Do go on, Miss Wilkes: 1 love pol entering ‘he shop truculently, ‘at a | itjes.” critical hour, five minutes of ninc. On “So does my cousin Magistrate their feet were black satin strap- {-Juddes,” simpered Miss Wilkes. pumps with rhinestone side-buckles; | “Here's the secret, dear. He's running from their coats peeped forth the | for congress, you Know, in the (ne school middy ; each bore in one hand | Hundred and Forty-Ninth district. a brief-case. but in the other a brown | Election's coming, and the One Hun: paper parcel all pinned up. It was | dred and Forty-Ninth district is al- tween the flashing rapiers. “1 don’t know whether Mr. Roberts will be here foday. He's off some- where on business for Mr. Darrow. who's in rhe country.” I wags stunned, hut worse was to come, and at once, : “Oh, Mr. Case,” said Miss Wilkes. “what about my cousin, Magistrate Juddes. getting that book?” “lI beg pardon?” murmured Mr Mr. Case, who still "had it? The next number on the program was to arrange with\the printer for a necessary delay in delivering the copy: a ftlery ordeal, for Mr. Gregory hag been in the business fifty-four years out of his total of sixty-eight, and seemed to think he knew something about it. After he had said six or seven times that the catalogue couldn't be printed at all unless the copy was ready by noon; and I had countered with the statement that three o'clock was the first minute he could expect it; we agreed on two o'clock. As | rang off, Mr.” Dibdin brought me law book, with which, he said, Mir Case had finished, Rosati Matter of Invention Among all the inventors of whom popular nistory tells, only three, Archimedes, Ericsson and Edison, Friday. Truculence equaled shyness. | ways uncertain and the national com: slippers plus Friday equaled dance, | mittee af ly cousin Magistrate Juddes brown paper minus pins equaled party- | party is taking special pains to win it frocks. I swiftly steered the pair | this time. Of course you don’t know down the aisle to the table where etl it, but Congressman Sturgis has great quette books were on display. While influence on this committee. And the they were selecting one | observed my | curious thing is, he is the great-great. desk, Miss Wilkes and Mr. (ase. nephew of the Clarihew who wrote They talked until the girl friends | the ‘Notes.’ Now, you know how much had hastened on to school to eram for | Southerners think of family —" the dance. Then Miss Wilkes van ished upward, still talking: Mr, Case disappeared toward his office: and | thruss that jinx of a book back into | be restored to Congressman Sturgis the lowest left-hand drawer of the | after generations of absence?” desk. with hoth haste and reluctance. But 1 could not well ask to have the sife opened in Mr. Roberts ahsence without arousing curiosity. Several sections of the catalogue had heen nicely pinned. unpinned. pasted and pulled spart again, when Mr. Case walked calmly up the aisle. “May | see that Clarihew for a min ute, please?” he asked. “Certainly,” said |i, “right away, as soon as | paste this page. | can't let gv 7? It, you see. The book's In my do you see how you can belp me? 1 will be personally absolutely responsi. ble for that book it you will jet me take it over the week-end. I'll de. posit the check here as ga guarantee | all the circumstances to my cousin, | t the matter suitably, Perhaps .it might | ¢ “l do,” 1 observed. “And so your | eighth grade knows that it was Morse cousin Magistrate Juddes believes that {and Vail, in 1844. But there was an this unique family memento should | English commercial line seven years earlier, and the German ‘credit the telegrap" to Sommering, of Munich, “How well you put it, dear! Now. | in 1809, and in Switzerland there was of good faith, and bring the bouvk back erating in China, is as follows: Kuo without fall Monday. | wil explain | means country, min means people and Magistrate Juddes, and he will handle | whole word is interpreted: Associa- even be more delicate to present the hands of the people. The association book after Mr. Sturgis bad shown his | is half patriotic, halt political, have been credited with more than one important ‘invention. Others may have equaled them in genius, but not in luck, So, leaving aside these three “great inventors,” let us take up the “inventors” who did everything else, and later the question of who were really great inventors. Who invented the telegraph? Any American who has been through the emotions on seeing it. 1 know ny | as the clog ; AS dock struck re] v ' avor ; ever. is He- cousin will buy it at the first possible clock struck rwelve, Luncheon flavor of tomato, however, is so ac lives been like brother and sister. His pect to entertain lavishly in Washing: ton next winter, and | may confide to r | you, Miss Fuller, that it is my ambi- tion to get .a connection in Washing Back at my desk in a perfectly dis- | ton; life there is so pleasant. 1 shoulda be glad to return this favor to you I locked book, bookplate, and key On many places fresh tomatoes dre A880 in the drawer of the desk Just | not obtainable during the spring. The Would again be sandwiches and coffee | ceptable in salad, and the vitamines for me, % ‘ yi contained even in canned tomatoes the alcove placarded “Medical Would want to wait for anything. “But—" So) sein : ; ks.” t i A S Selzed the chance to work with- are sq “te i Works.” Peter Burton, one of When Mr. Case had gone, with shak. “And 1, Miss Fuller, would be in OL infers 4 on \ré so important in the diet, that an the employees, amazes Constance ing’ hands | grabbed in aste-brush | finitely Indebted ro ot Mv cousin 3 ption for the tirst time that attractive way of servidg tomato in by telling her he paid $510 at ing “hands | gr: y Pp? 3 y you. My i day, and at last, as the hands Of the | a salad has been evolved. A jelly is auction for an old law book con- and stuck the bookplate on lightly | Magistrate Juddes and | have all our JEN clock reacheq two, and Mr. Gregory's made from the canned tomato Juice, boy arrived to git on.a stugl and Io- = While no other flavor need be used spect me disparagingly while | put on 4 particularly good aspic is made by the final touches, 1 finished the cata- molding other vegetables, cut up in logue copy. Clarihew's “Notes on small pieces, in the tomato Juice. Here Medical Statutes in the Virginia Code” | is the recipe, from the bureau of was described as one of very few | home economics: known copies, in excellent condition, ) ; 5 Some leaves uncut, of rare interest to '% shvelopes, S75. 5h. pelatin collectors f Virgin : 1 quart canned tomatoes S 0 Tginiana; and, after my | ; finely chopped green pepper bp nocturnal researches, | had even 2 tbs, finely chopped celery thought ot something to say about the | ! tbs. finely chopped parsley boukplate. “Clever counterfeit of un. | } CUP Very finely shredded cabbage in hi 1% tsp. salt | Identified Colfax plate, presumed lost,” % tsp. onion juice announced the notice. “Shows interior | 3% tsp. sugar of surgery of early Nineteenth cen- | tury, featuring interesting scientific in- struments; charming Seascape in back- ground. Nameless: no date. Unique.” The catalogue haq gone in the arms of the boy, and | felt as if my luck was beginning to turn at last, when this feeling was confirmed by the sight gelatin mixture is partly set, add the of Mr. Roberts approaching on the finely shredded vegetables and mix sidewalk. | Snatched the keys out at well. Add more salt. if needed. Also my purse in the front drawer of the if the mixture is not tart enough, add desk, unlocked the lowest left-hand a little lemon juice or vinegar. Pour drawer, opened it, and slipped my | into wet custard cups and place in hand under Some papers to take out the cold until set. Turn these molds the law bo. Suddenly my heart out on crisp lettuce leaves and serve | Stood still. I threw the papers on the floor, looked, looked again. Then | | fell back in my chair, and gasped . . frantically as Mr. Roberts flung pe Making Delicate Dessert door open : . | rE Flavored With Chocolate “Whats Sone » A delicate dessert flavored with “Clarihew’s ‘Notes’! Good Heavens, | ¢10¢olate can be made in the follow- what shall we do?” ~ |'ing way, according to the bureau of Mr. Roberts demanded an explana. | OMe economics: tion, 1 stared mutely in desperation | ; at the floor, and wondered it | could of water. Boil the tomatoes for five minutes, and strain through a fine sieve to remove the seeds. Pour the hot tomato juice over the gelatin and stir until it is dissolved. Add the salt and the sugar and chill. When the with mayonnaise, 2 cup sugar 3, cup milk 2 cup fine stale 4 eggs really wait until five o'clock to have : biesd crufnbs x tsp. YOR i i : N S. 2 2 squares choe- | hysterics in decent privacy. Then | the Sour quares 1 tbs. butter olate, unsweet- found myselt in his office. 1 poured 4 tsp. salt ened. out my soul about Miss Wilkes, for ft was she who I felt sure first had taken the book. “How did she know where It was? How did she get your Keys and un- lock the drawer?” demanded Mr. Rob erts, dashing my theory to pieces on the rocks of good sense. “Well, how did anybody?’ | pe torted, ut he said she wasn’t smart enough. at least, whoever had been, and 1 felt a shade better, especially when he langhed about Magistrate Juddes, ana u , said he had heard of his political amn- Bouillon Desirable at bitions. : : ; “Still, Mr. Roberts,” | Insisted. Beginning of a Dinner “there’s another reason why she might A bouillon, OF clear Sonn, 13 ery want it—why everybody that's heen open desirgble at the begianing: of trying for that book might want it) 1 | 8 formal or rather hearty dinner. Jt sat up all night finding it out)” {hug be carefully Seasoned 10 he at “All night! What did you fingy» | !IS best These directions from the “You remember that counterfeit bookplate?” | began. He nodded. “Well, in accordance with Mr. Dar | Mix the flour and butter, add the milk, and stir over heat until thick- ened. Melt the chocolate over Steam, and add to the cream sauce, with the salt, bread crumbs, sugar, and well beaten egg yolks. Beat well. Fold in the well beaten whites of the eggs Pour into a greased pudding dish and bake in a moderate oven (325 degrees Fahrenheit) for one hour or until well set in the middle. Serve hot with hard sauce or whipped cream. good results: Tomato Bouillon. { carrots Lu 6 stalks celery cover of the book, | discovered a tiny, | old-fashioned key!” ; “A key! In the cover! Let's see it.’ yor grec pop. % tn De op “It's gone, with the book. And | per 1 tbs. butter found something else. On Tuesday morning I was working in the history alcove; I found this paper there. It | $aucepan and add the vegetables, eut ! Put tomatoes, salt, and stock in a F int, then sir ar + fiftee in- { * 1 produced the yellow slip Mr. Rob. pe a én simmer for fifteen min erts frowned in amazement to recog , : nize his own message returned to him of cleosecloth, add the tarragon | 1 thas strangely, and so battered, vinegar and the butter. Reheat and | basket Monday morning,” 1 continued chopped hargley on top in each ep | “Professor Harrington had picked jp | ©f bouillon, out to write on it a list of hooks ne Ter PT ERR Sa vie wanted ; it’s still on the back. I was oaturally quite surprised to come | STUFFED FLA across itdagain as | have described So | stuck it into my pocket. | have been so busy that I didn't think of it again until last night,.when my atten i the | moving the bookplate.” Bester Chinese Society The English translation of Kuoming- ang, mentioned so frequently as op- ang or tong means associition. The ion to- bring the country into the tion was called to it while I was re “In what way? + (TO BE CONTINUED.) { , ESHA Subject to Dispute an electric telegraph in 1774, and one | Was proposed in Scotland in 1753. The matter becomes rather confus- ing for the eighth grade. Who invent. ed the friction mateh? There are so many claimants that we don't know who invented it. » (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) a A flank steak is one of the less tender I cuts of meat, since it has long muscle | ar Who devised the aneroid barometer? fibers which become somewhat stringy | Beginning at one side, roll it up like In Paric in 1848 two men, Vidi and unless cooked and carved in the right | a 3ourdon, each claimed it, with appar- way. Flank steak, however, is eco- pl ent sincerity, and different courts de- nomical, for there is no bone and cided for each of them. But 152 sears other waste material. Like others earlier the philosopher, Leibniz, had among the less tender cuts, it can suggested such a barometer, deserib- he made into an attractive and deli- ing it exactly.—Scicutific Monthly, cious dish when one knows how. or The general method of cooking any | fp, ot the less tender cuts differs from Co ac A Clean Mug Agnes, five years old, a little ong the method for tender. cuts. Heat, moderate oven, and cook for one and told avout in “Children.” had peep Moisture, and slow cooking, help to |, called from .play to breakfast. Whep Make these cuts. tender. The flank th her mother told her to wash her face Steik stuffed with well-seasoned mix- pa and tumds, she replied, “All right, | ture is first seared and then cooked | Dray off the fat. For e mamn.a, Pll wash my hands, bot I've | slowly in a tightly covered vessel un- gr washed my face once and I havens | tl the meat is tender. fu used ft since.” ziven by the bureau of home é&co- sti . . aomice Peanut’s Kinship Flank k 1 io inced Bi an stea onion, Join The peanut is the fruit of a spread- 13% cups stale bread % cup ‘chopped Se ing herb which belongs ro the same or- crumbs celery der of plants as the been und the pea, | 1 tsp. salt <3 tbs. butter % tsp pepper toes. Soak the gelatin in a small amount | if you have it. Let it stand in a warm bureau of home economics will give | added to almost any soup, stew, or vegetable salad. rragon menu, and make profitable use of | small amounts of each vegetable. i SIN¢ ieces, re ving > seeds | ses speci: ¢ e eces fell out of a book that was on gD SIU pisces i ing th Sceds | season. special food m }F [be Dé Shelf.” from the pepper. Bring to the boiling | sary. If they cease to sing, prepared utes. Strain through a thick: layer | The United States Department of Ag “1 bad thrown that into the waste. | SCTVe. Place thin slices of lemon with | abnormal conditions, in Farmers’ Bul- Management,” which is free. NK STEAK MADE DELICIOUS Flank Steak Can Be Made Into Savory Digh, be rolled lengthwise so that when carved in slices the meat will be cut small quantity of fat in a baking pan The ingredients for ruffed flank are 11% browned. Then add 1 cupful of cold ‘WAYS TO COOK AND ‘SERVE ASPARATUS If Allowed to Stand It Toughens and Loses Flavor. | (Pre ared by the United States Department of Agricultuge.) Asparagus should always be cooked i 4s soon as possible after it is cut, It toughens and loses flavor very rapidly | if allowed to stand. To prepare it for | cooking trim off any tough ends, brush Without Poison A New Exterminator that is Absolutely Safe to use Anywhere! Will not injure human beings, livestock, carefully, and scrape off the larger | Cogs, cats, poultry, yet is deadly to rate and mice every time, Polsons are too dangerous X-R-0 does not contain arsenic, phose phorus, barium carbonate or any deadly poison. * Made of powdered squill asrece ommended by the U, S. Dept. of Agri culture in their latest bulletin on **Rat Control." “One of our good customersjust told us he gathered 105 dead rats on his farm from g 8 2-ounce package of K-R-O. a hear of many find ng 30 or 40 rats aftes using K-R ad which Is highly successful and should plea Je yon." Wolgamot's Drug Store, Richwood, O. 75c at your Qrageiekt large size (four times as much) $2.00, Sent postpaid direct from us if dealer cannot supply you. SOLD ON MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE. The K-R-O Come pany, Springfield, Ohio, “R=0 KILLS-RATS-ONLY place for a few minutes and then | > 1 serve, either alone or on toast. Hol- landaise o white sauce may accom- scales. Wash so as to remove all sand | and particles of earth whieh may have lodged under the scales. Fresh, ten- der, home-grown asparagus does not need scraping. Asparagus is cooked in slightly salt- | ed water whole, or cut up in inch lengths. The pieces may be left whole, The cooking time of fresh tender | Young stalks cut up in this way may be only five to ten minutes, according to the United States Department of Agriculture; twenty to twenty-five minutes’ cooking at most should be enough. | Season the cooked asparagus with salt, pepper, butter and a little cream |! WORMS SAP A CHILD’S VERY LIFE Does your child grit his teeth? Pick his nostrils? Have a disordered stomach? These are symptoms of worms— those deadly parasites which will so quickly ruin a child’s health. At the first sign of worms, give your child Frey's Vermifuge. For 75 years Frey's Vermifuge has been America's safe, vegetable worm med- icine. Buy it today at your druggist’s. Frey’s Vermifuge Expels Worms [r— GRAIN THRESHERS Do Fast, Clean Work Use Your Tractor and Make BIG PROFITS We Will Make Special Prices and Terms FARQUHAR Box 589 York, Pa. \ 100 QUARTERS OR MORE A DAY AND give dollar article to every customer. Send for dollar article. Complete plans, La | SERVICE, Box 205, Yakima, Wash. Preparing Asparagus on Toast. pany the ‘asparagus or mayonnaise or | = vinaigrette, which is similar to French Pictures on Windows dressing. Members of an rt colony in Boston The water in which asparagus has’ pave solved the question of keeping been cooked can be used in many ways some of their windows attractive, says and should be saved. It makes a de- Popular Mechanics Magazine. Instead licious soup when seasoned, with a of having to wash the glass constant- little cream or milk added. This may | |y they merely use a paint brush now he .hickened or not. as preferred. and then, for the panes are covered Asparagus stock is an improvement with decorative designs of wide va- to soups made from other’ vegetable riety and color. The plan is especial juices, such as tomato, onion, or cel- ly well suited for windows that are ery. It combines well with cream of not greatly needed to admit light, and chicken soup, and can be made into a even painting the glass does not shut good sauce to use with left-over as- out all the illumination, as there are paragus in making other dishes. open spaces in the designs, Cooked asparagus may be used in _—roolr making scalloped dishes, : FrOquettes: How Come? ritters. vegetable af, ales, or a fritters. vegetable loaf, timbales, o If an efficiency expert can show a pickle manufacturer how to make hig business double its earnings, then Why doesn’t Le go into that line himself? Vegetable combina- tions are increasingl popular, and 9 t nnea , such dishes as eut-up cooked aspara- | p’ p, I'S, if y it: € quarts cannec o cloves 5 . —_—————— row’s orders, 1 removed it; and be- Supra hon bperh gus with new diced creamed potatoes, | Ever thingie RB Ton : ho aeath it, Mr. Roberts, sunk into the Be ts 2 i to vl Verything comes to the man whe ¥ 7 . ’ 2 cups meat broth corns or with peas, give variety to the waits—and ‘the bill collector heads the procession. Care of Canaries When canaries do not thrive well. or during molting time or the breeding | ‘song restorers” are sometimes given. riculture furnishes information as to low to handle the birds under various etin 1327, “Canaries: Their Care and : DON'T suffer headaches, or any of those pains that Bayer Aspirin can end in a hurry! Physicians prescribe it, and approve its free use, for it does not affect the heart. Every drug- gist has it, but don't fail to ask the druggist for Bayer. And don't take any but the box that says Bayer, with the word genuine printed in red: Wipe the meat with a damp cloth. | or the stuffing, brown the celery | 1d the onion lightly over the steak. | Jelly roll and tie securely in several aces with elean string. It should Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture ‘TOSS the grain. Sear the roll in a 1 top of the steve, turning the meat equently until browned on all sides, wer closely, place the meat in 4 | half hours, or until tender.” When | € meat is done, remove from the n and prepare gravy as follows; ach cupfu' of avy desired, measure 2 tablespoon- Is of fat and return to the pan, add to 2 tablespoonfuls of flour and r until well blended and slighrty AAU Druggists water or milk and stir until’ smooth, FOLDER ABOUT DEN/WESS "0M REQUEST, ason with salt and pepper, Serve £0; the stuffed steak with browned pota- | MR STEWH FUSS (ABOVE) WORRYIN' BECUL “THE WORLDS SUPPLY OF GASOLME wit MAavge) BE EXHAUSTED ON APRIL 20uT AD ARE Clan The L Candy Has Ot By PERCY 1 ® dy the McCly { BERETA
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers