TT —— lr rn shen SA A co A on iy icin Sion, . rolled fine, - - minutes. or CREE NR eT WES - So x PET TTT TARR Sy pa y - Fx X Ham Sandwich. The secret of the delicious ham sandwiches served at an afternoon tea last week was in the cooking of the ham and the abundance of maycn- naise, used in mixing the meat. The ham had been broiled until it was brown and then ground very fine and mixed plentifully with mayonnaise. The meat may be cooked in the oven, a thin slice being allowed to bake until it is well browned, or the meat may be fried. There is a more defi- “ite flavor about’ ham cooked in any of these ways than there is if it is boiled,—New York Sun.- 5 yr re hy (5 CE oe, TORRY. St he a = Vegetable Scallop. " Butter a deep granite or earthen dish; put a layer of thinly sliced Shion in the bottom, then of thinly | sliced potatoes, then layer of sliced tomatoes; season with salt, pepper and butter, a large tablespoon sugar, then layer of dried bread crumbs, Repeat the process and cover with bread crumbs; pour over a teacup of water and put in oven; add water while cooking if needed; it should be of the consistency of scalloped tomatoes when done and will require one and one-half hours to cook. Very nice with fish or roast meat.—Boston Post. : : " Snow Drift, One pint milk, butter size of an English walnut, one-half cup sugar, two and a half dessert spoonfuls of corn starch (moistened with a little milk), whites of three eggs beaten to a stiff froth, one teaspoon vanilla; put the milk into double boiler, add the sugar, then the butter; let come to a boiling point, then add the corn starch, let it thicken up, then take from fire and add the vanilla and the stifly beaten whites of eggs; beat hard for a minute or two, then set the dish in the hot water again for * one minute; then remove and pour into moulds and put on ice or serve with cream and sugar.—Boston Post. wef rm ] : gm WG Se 307” Broiled Chicken. , It requires a very clear fire for brolling chicken, and even with much care they are apt to scorch more or less; so to make the work easier and overcome all difficulty they may be partially cooked in the oven. Order the chicken dressed for broiling at the market, and wipe with a cheesecloth wrung out of cold water. Place in a buttered dripping pan, skin side down; sprinkle with salt and pepper and dot over with bits of butter; bake in a hot oven fifteen Remove to a hot, well greased broiler and broil over a clear fire ten minutes, turning the broiler frequently that all parts may be broiled evenly. Arrange on a hot platter, spread with butter, sprinkle with salt and garnish with parsley.— Boston Post, \ { ; Corn Chowder. ; To make the chowder, cold cooked ears of corn may be utilized. Grate or cut from the cob enough to make a quart of corn. Cut into small pieces one-half pound bacon or fat salt pork, and cook in a frying pan until brown. Just before it reaches this stage add a medium-sized onion minced fine and brown also. Put into a stew pan a layer of diced potatoes, sprinkle over some of the browned onion and bacon, then a layer of cut corn, with salt and pepper to season. Next, add another layer of potatoes, more bacon, onion and corn and So on until all the material has been used, having corn at the top. It will require about four or five potatoes, dependent upon size. Add a cup and three-quarters of boiling water, cover the pot and cook gently for thirty minutes. Make a cream sauce, using two tablespoons of each of butter and flour and two cups of hot milk. ‘When cooked smooth and thick, add - to the kettle of chowder, a few crack- ers broken and stirred in at the last, and a tablespbonful of minced pars- ley. Serve hot.—Washington Star. / [[ROBNDABOUA™ FHE HOUSE. LS A running or darning stitch is the best for padding small spaces in French or satin stitch embroideries. Shredded chicken dressed lightly with mayonnaise and served in little | emi al French rolls is popular at afternoon teas. A lovely centrepiece of fine linen was beautifully decorated with white and blue cords in a conventional de- sign. ; Chinese, Indian and Bulgarian em- broideries are favorites for all kinds of bags, card cases and veil and hand- kerchief cases. It is better to use light blue trans- fer paper for tracing embroidery de- signs than the dark colors, as these are apt to rub off and soil the article. A linen or denim shoe bag, with one Japanese motif of simple though striking design on each pocket, is a useful and attractive gift for a man. A shredded Spanish sweet red pep- per adds flavor to creamed fish. especially tasty with creamed finnan haddock or any other coarse fibred fish. ; Practical and attractive lamp mats are made of linen in gray or the nat- ural color embroidered in shades that harmonize with the furnishing of the room. For a dinner fruit cocktail fill punch glasses half full of diced pine- apple and oranges and top the mix- ture with mint ice. Lemon or orange ice may be used instead of the mint. To pad a wide edge for a button- holed scallop, go over the outline with a row of catstitch or with the loose chain stitch. This saves many stitches of padding and serves the same pur- pose. To cook a pumpkin easily halve it, remove the seeds and bake in oven. ‘When tender scoop pumpkin out with a spoon and rub through a colander. Scorching is prevented and time saved by this method. nade ~ THE ROTHSCHILDS. Origin of Family and How It Became so Opulent. As the revolution in France was the beginning of modern history in its other distinguishing phases, so it gave rise, directly or indirectly, to concen- trations of modern financial power. The leading example is the history of the Rothschilds, In one of the mean and dirty houses in the Jewish quarter of Frankfort, Mayer Amschel was born in the year 1743. The house was numbered 142 in the Judengasse, but was better known by its sign of the Red Shield, which gave its name to the Amschel family. Mayer was-educated by his parents for a rabbi; but judging himself bet- ter fitted for finance, he! entered the service of a Hanover banker mamed Oppenheim, and remained with him until he had saved enough to set up for himself. Then for some years he dealt in old coins, curios and bullion; then returned to Frankfort, estab- lished himself in the house of the Red Shield, and rapidly advanced toward opulence. In a féw years he gave up his ir- regular trade and confined himself to banking. Such was his integrity that the Landgrave of Hessen, in posses- sion of large treasure in the garly days of Napoleon’s career of Eurc- pean conquest, confided that treasure to the “court Jew,” who kept it out} {R of Napoleon’s grasp and restored it to its owner later. Out of this trans- action Mayer made a great deal of money. So likewise, out of his trans- actions with the Danish and Prussian governments later. He left five sons, to whom upon his death bed his last words were: ‘You will soon be rich among the richest, and the world will belong to you.”” The prophecy was more nearly true for the period down to fifty years ago than it is now. The five sons conceived and exe- cuted an original and daring scheme. While the eldest remained at Frank=- fort and conducted the parent house, the four others emigrated to four different capitals, Naples, Vienna, Paris and London, and acting con- tinually in concert, they succeeded in obtaining a control over the money market of Europe, as unprecedented as it was lucrative to themselves. It was the third brother, Nathan, who settled in London. He had a com- manding ability, a natural genius for finance; his grandson, Nathaniel ‘Mayer, born in 1840, was raised to the peerage, as Baron Rothschild, in 1885.— Portland Oregonian. Grapes Tied by Baby Ribbon. The Eastern shipments of ‘“‘cluster- ettes,” the new grape pack sent out this year by the California Fruit Ex- change, utilized $3600 worthe@f fancy baby ribbon, which if stretched in one piece would cover a distance of twen- ty-five* miles. The experiment proved a success, and the growers sending grapes East packed with fancy ribbon received much larger prices than those whose consignments went in the rdinary manner. Clusterettes go in the nat- ural form in large bunches as picked from the vine, packed in specially constructed crates so the berries will not bruise.—Sacramento Correspond- ence San Francisco Chronicle, Bride Receives an Aeroplane, Wedding presents are a very good index to the tastes of the times and the character of the young folk of the period. One has seen some curious changes in this direction during the last quarter of a century. There was a time when the lucky bride proudly numbered a brougham and horse among the, “numerous and costly.” This gave place to the silver plated bicycle, that in turn was superseded by the motor car, and now one reads that an aeroplane was among the gifts presented to a recent bride. This presumably will become an estab- lished present for a while, but what its successor may be is beyond the wildest Lady’s Pictorial. 3 3 It is. imagination to conceive.—' PRIME MINISTER OF ENGLAND. Novel Skirt Gauge. inventors are divided into two classes—those = that. invent skirt gauges and those that invent other things, and the latter are only slightly in the majorigy. One of the former, J) a RN Rw XxX » ® WMH a California, man, designed the skirt gauge shown in the illustration. This consists in a base plate, with guide ways and an upright backing plate. A guage plate, corresponding with the backing plate, is movably mounted on the base and is held in position by a spring. The gauge plate has a series of slots running up to it to permit of the garment being marked. The skirt is placed between the two upright plates and the device is moved around its whole circumfer- ence. The amount to be taken off the garment is measured on the gauge chalk this length.can be marked off as the device circles the cloth. As will be readily noted, the line thus drawn is necessarily accurate and there is no danger of taking off more cloth in one part than in another.— Boston Post, / ——— A Certain City Peril. you won’t be shot by being mistaken for a deer, but you may be mistaken for.a lamp post by a chauffeur and run down.—Boston Herald. ing the seats one by one? plate, and by means of a piece of HERBERT HENRY ASQUITLL A Useful Man, “See him? That's the baby ele- phant. He’s the best Kicker in the team.” “How far can he. kiex?” “Oh, he dossn’t kick far, he kicks hard. He's disabled thirty-seven (his season.”—Pubif Cpinicn. Car Seats cn Lever. Aside from the question of comfort, the thing that limits the distance be- tween car seats is the space needed for the turning of the backs of these seats. A Philadelphia man has elim- inated this feature by inventing a mechanism which turns alternate seats automatically, and not only saves space, but saves the conductor time. This device consists of a lever mechanism running under the seats and connecting with the backs. There are two levers, each operating alter- nate seats, so that when one series are turned the others remain station- ary, and there is no interference be- tween them. Who has not seen a ‘conductor passing through a train or trolley at the end of a run and turn- ‘With this device the whole two rows of seat backs can be reversed with two move. Of course, if you stay in the city | ments, either by hand or by means of the compressed air which operates ' the brakes, as it is easy to harnest | the levers to this power.—Washing- ton Star. y I THE VERY SUPERIOR NEW RICH. 1 Pinnin i nh Loe Yee SE 8 -N RECS v J Mr. Parvenu' (to his host) —"“At my house my daughters each has a | piano of her own.”—From Pele Mele. Ja ‘rushed forward again, | FISHING IN AFRICAN RIVER. A Sixty-Pounder That Furnished Some Exciting Sport, One can easily imagine that after feeding for many weeks upon hippo- potamus steaks, the flesh of elephants and other coarse food of that nature fish of almost any variety would form an agreeable and pleasant change. Such, at all events, was the opinion’ of Sir Samuel Baker, who, after a long march in Africa, through a wild’ and dangerous country, arrived upon’ the borders of a broad river. He took his fishing rod, and wandering up stream cast his line over the water in the hope ® enticing some beauty of the. deep to take issue with him. “I put on a large bait and threw it about forty yards into the river, well up the stream, and allowed the float to sweep the water in a half circle, thus taking the chance of different distances from the shore. “For about half an hour nothing moved. I was just preparing to alter my position when out rushed my line, and striking hard, I believe I fixed the ‘old gentleman’ himself, for I had no control over him whatever. “Holding him was out of the ques- tion. The line flew through my hands| and cut them till the blood flowed, and I was obliged to let the fish take his own way. “This he did for about eighty vardg when he suddenly stopped. This un« expected halt was a great calamity; for the reel overran itself, having na check wheel, and the slack coils of the line caught the handle just as he and with a jerk that nearly pulled the rod from my:hands he was gone. “I found one of my large hooks broken short off. The fish was a monster. “After this bad luck I had no run until the evening, when, putting on a large bait and fishing at the tail of a rock between the stream and still water, I once more had a grand rush and hooked a big one. “There were no rocks down stream, all was fair play and clear water, and away he went at racing pace straight for the middle of the river. To check the pace, I grasped the line with the stuff of my loose trousers and pressed every yard, but he pulled like a horse and nearly cut through the thick cot-. ton cloth, making straight running for at least 'a hundred yards without a halt. “I now put so severe a strain upon him that my strong bamboo bent nearly double, and the fish presently so far yielded to the pressure that I could enforce his running in half cir- cles instead of straight away. “I kept gaining line until at length I led him into a shallow bay, and af- ter a fight Bacheet embraced him by falling upon him, and clutching the monster with hands and knees, he then tugged to the shore a magnifi- cent fish of upward of sixty pounds. “For about twenty minutes he had fought against such a strain as I had never before used upon a fish, It measured three feet eight inches to the root of the tail, and two feet three inches in girth of shoulders, and the head measured one foot ten inches in circumference.”’—Youth’s Companion. 4} api No Siesta in Manila Now. The Spaniard damned us for one new custom in particular when we went into business in Manila. We didn’t take well to the siesta hour. It was no part of our business cur- riculum. Also it was one of the few logical things that the American ab- solutely refused to take into consid- eration by dovetailing it into his com- mercial institution and bylaws. Promptly at the noon hour in the early days in Philippine cities mer- chants scurried home hehind their liveried coachmen, while their em- ployes ducked along out of the sun or rain to their boarding places. The store or office, as the case might be, was locked up tight, It so remained while the force dined and took its afternoon nap. About 3 o'clock the commercial world awakened again, rubbed its bloodshot eyes, rinsed lite mouth of a dark brown taste, and grouchily returned to the tasks at the desk or behind the counter. Now- adays few stores close at noon. All are anxious for the extra pesos the American hoped to get by keeping open. doors at midday. -—— Monroe ‘Woolley, in the Bookkeeper. Bridget’s Explanation. Bridget, who had administered the culinary affairs of the Morse house- hold for many years, was sometimes torn between her devotion to her mis- tress and lovalty to the small son of the house. : “Bridget,” said Mrs. Morse in a tone of wonder after an inspection of the storeroom, “where have those splendid red apples gone that the man brought yesterday—those four big ones?” “Well, now, ma'am,” said poor Bridget, “I couldn’t rightly say, but where my loaf 0’ hot gingerbread is, likely those four red apples would be lyin’ right on top of it, an’ I’m only hopin’ his little inside can stand the strain. ”"—Tit-Bits. : imi its it between my fingers so as to act as a : brake and compel him to labor for, I'm thinking if you were to find out ined! TTR RR v se SAT Ty \ gr > * : ic FE dt