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PEATURES.T THE EVENING STAR WASHINGTON D. C., SATURDAY. Old-Style Hanging Shelves in Vogue BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. HIGH Ik n in vogue ses than the |0 be enjoyed ey | vorite a- | reach, stud: Iresser t O wffet EEDTI\IE STORIES [living r ) spot |two pieces |tive period |the hanging shelves may not be used | excelle FAVOR FOR DINING ROOM THE TOPS OF DUTCH DRESSERS DSOME WAR IN'A CO? VA cha ception halls that s rooms. oms, mbers, dens and re. e spacious enough On them fa may be within handy bhooks may be kept in or ¥. books on cooking and do- science may be close to the emaker’s desk.” Perhaps the vol- umes may be just above it, for above a writing desk is a most_appropriate for hook shelves. Together the are not_unlike the much prized secretaries of an earlier decora books arr Modernized Use. Since brica-brac is no longer at least not under such a na in style e Neverthele varied k to be more a difference in usage between period and today. nodes have modern- whatnots one ia treas- would seem terms than in actual the mid-Victorian But urrent his is n there se hold choice ornament ractical value, provided they are decorative. It is a mistake > souvenirs and keepsakes tha on display unless they They mean nothing usually seem like shelves to no ish pu re worth while iests, and e-podg Fasten Securely. fmportant to have hanging fastened very securely to They shemld not be suspended m picture m gs merely. This illows them to sway in a draught or when touched and the things on them are jeopardized. Mirror fastenings are t. They should be screwed sts or beams and not into laths. It sh BY THORNTON W. BURGESS P a Yap Yap at Home. £00d twinkled too far 1 to try replied PETER SHE 4 “HOW DOES THEM?" HE IN .t sald that le-tangle. for Yap's little he o1 mt 5 ed you 1 been in Yap me,"” »se he loved me his Old Man Coyote, for lived out there he Ferret ' de h in mily.” 1 good and he 1ve to do ht down | ! the open edge t with- whethe there. Now and it took Those door- are enemies Dogs, great In & Yap p on his doorstep. of his nelgh: Whoever v they all But Yap t as much curi Rabbit. He ind stay way he pops his round. He just know what ‘the doing. Such a fuss as kes when he discovers Rattlesn Buzztail hod thing.” you mean by that?” c Digger suspiciously. “What do he de mand I mean Dog is quite as m ing the I kno Peter shivere them?” he i oS young Prai tatl's 1 her folks r licked his lips. “How does he catch ired fter them very ich to Buz: f some « dow " rer.ied home in a Prairie Dog town. replied | relatives | neighbors. | it | RACIAL ORIGIN—English. |Dog |this latter knows he is sure of a good living, and what more can any one ask. Then there is a little cousin of Hootv the Owl who lives in Prairie Dog town, also I have seen him sitting up on rie Doy doorsten many times. e some people who believe p Yap. this little Owl and Buzz Rattlesnake all live together and happily in the s makes me laugh to That Owl, called the Bur Owl, simply uses an old Prairie home that no one else Is using. It saves the trouble of digging a home. tail makes use of one of thos old homes, too. If that Owl should happen to make a mistake and be 1ght by Yap Yap in his home there ldn't be any Owl to tell about ft. Burrowing Owl knows a good thing, too. He lives very largely on young Prairie Dogs “Well,” said Pete: 11 T can say is that I don't envy Yap Yap his home with neighbors of that kind around. (Copyright. 1925, by T. W. Bursess.) MOTHERS ' AND THEIR CHILDREN. th tail the nforta Sleeping Bags. mother say T find that cotton crib kets can be made into idea bags with little trouble. up each side and part way across the | top. Run a silk or tape drawstring through the buttonholed finish about blan- sleeping Simply seam Bistory of Dour Name BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN, ELLSWORTH SOURCE—A locality. Here is a family name which is de- rived from a place name, which in its turn is derived from a given name. The ending “worth” is sufficient to tell you that it is a place name, for it is a word which has been compounded into so many English family names, and one which, though now not in general use, is not so completely ob- solete as to be entirely forgotten, In the speech’of the early Anglo- Saxons a worth denoted any “warded” space; that is, any land that was not open to the public, that was guarded or fenced off in any manner. Later it came to mean a farmstead, and it was meaning that was most generally attributed to it at the period of family name formation There is today a locality in Cam- bridge known as Ellsworth. Originally this was “Ellist Worth,” or the farm- stead of Ellis. And Ellis as well as such forms as “Elys,” “Elice,” “Hel- |a SUMMERTIME BY D. C. PEATTIE. Hydrangeas. This {s hydrangea week in the Dis- trict of Columbia, if one may judge by the unusually splendid display of white, pink and blue hydrangeas that one may see in every suburb of Wash- ington now. Time was, not so long ago, in our grandmother’s days, when there were only white hydrangeas Now that there are pink and blue ones on the market it is often thought that some plant wizard has “created” the showy- c@lored varieties. As a matter of fact, pink and blue hydrangeas are nothing but a piece of-legitimate legerdemain. They are the same old plants that our grandmothers knew, artificially col- ored Have yvou ever seen a farmer test his soil with litrius paper? Litmus is chemical derived from a lichen, which when it comes in contact with acid turns pink, and in contact with alkali turns blue. The reaction of the hydrangea to acids and alkalles is su- perficially similar. It is found, for in stance, that by adding alum or iron filings to the soil blue hydrangeas can be made from pink ones. It used to be charged against hy. drangeas that the blue ones were “'sickly” in hue. The modern vivid blue hydrangea is not, however, a plece of improvement by plant breed- ing, but merely more skillful soil man agement. The cultivated hydrangea is rather a fascinating example of scientific se- lection, for in one sense of th it has almost ceased to be a flower. In the wild hydrangeas only a few, or even none, of the flowers are like the showy blossoms with large petals that make up the entire head of the culti vated plant. Wild species have little white flowers in flat-topped clusters, and then one or two of the larger flowers, which, however, are devoid of the organs of reproduction, re abso lutely sterile, never set seed, and exist apparen for nothing more than show-—perhaps they attract insects to the other fertile blossoms By some curious sport the entire in- florescence blossomed out into sterile showy flowers, and this freak being noticed by some old-world gardener, it was at once seized on and propagated But the modern hydrangea is a sterile plant, however gaudy. It has ceased to fulfill the functions of a flower. Its blossoms might as well be bayly col- ored leaves. In the District of Columbia there is a native wild hydrangea, with soft, creamy-colored flowers and modest mien, now in bloom. For those who love nature best when she is untamed and who prefer modest fertile flowers to pretentious sterile ones. the wild hydrangea, for all its humble appear ance, is attracting more attention this week than its garden cousins. MODE MINIATURES Lingerie of the tailored type—dur able but none the less smart—creates slim silhouette. Proportioned with the utmost care, each garment fits smoothly without pulling or stretch ing, thus giving aight, slender foundation, and is consequently the kind that belongs with the season’s simply styled frock And particularly in summer, when traveling “light” necessitates the proc- ess of elimination beginning with the underworld of chemises, step-ins, gowns and envelope, is glove silk lin gerie first in cholce. For it packs easily. launders easily, and is dainty enough to wear with any dres MARGETTE. Snow Pyramids. To one pint of cold thick cream add four tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar, one teaspoonful of vanilla and one-fourth box of gelatin which has been soaked in a little cold water and then dissolved by standing over the teakettle. When it begins to slightly thicken whip until light and thic Turn into small glasses and set away Just before serving beat the whites of six eggs to a stiff meringue with ix tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar, adding gradually one-half a tumbler of currant jelly. Drop a large spoon- ful of this on tha top of each glass of cream, keeping it up like a pyra- mid. MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Melons. Dry Cereal with Cream Baked Sausages Potatoe Cakes Gems Bran Coftee DINNER. Fricassee of Chicken Riced Potatoes Green Peas Fruit Salad Frozen Pudding Coffee SUPPER. Lobster Salad French Rolls Sliced Peaches Cup Cakes Coffee BRAN GEMS. One cup of bran, one cup of whole wheat or graham flour, one and one-quarter cups of milk, one teaspoonful of salt, one egg, one tablespoonful of sugar, one and one-half teaspoonfuls of baking powder, two tablespoon- fuls of melted butter. Bake in hot oven in well greased gem pans. FROZEN PUDDING. Make a custard of a pint of milk and four eggs; stir into it one pint of rich cream; put {nto freezer and grind until frozen, but not very hard, then add one tablespoon of vanilla, oné cup candied fruits cut up fine and one-half cup of raisins, citron and currants, also cut fine; stir into the cream with a long- handled spoon and let it stand in the ice and salt three hours. FRENCH ROLLS. To one quart of very light dough of butter, add one-quar- ter pound of cheese cut, or two whites of eggs, beaten till white. Knead and let rise till light. When raised, knead gently; roll in one-inch strips. Dredge with flour, braid loosely; let rise; brush with sugar disolved in yas,” etc., were simply English and He j« quite apt to muke his | Norman variations of the period, of | He the given name of Elijah or Elias, milk; sprinkle with poppy seeds: bake quickly. word | tha |and sympathize with the ¥ DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Tragedy of Quarreling Parents — How to Jolt a Too Strict Father Out of His Old-Fashioned Ideas—Wise Words to a Girl. DEAR MISS DIX: What can a girl do to stop the continuous quarreling between her parents? My brother and I are the only children, and our household affairs should run smoothly, but instead everything goes wrong because my father and mother fuss and argue in our presence, which makes us children feel very badly It is mainly my father's fault. He is grumpy, selfish, and never speaks except to give an order or disapprove of something. And he raves when my mother asks for money. She never does, except for the house, for I buy all of her clothes, as she is the dearest mother in the world Is it not another one of those sad cases where the man has grown tired of the woman after she has raised his children, cooked his meals, mended his clothes, and kept his house for more than 20 vears? If I were confronted with a thing like this, I would pick up my few rags and leave. JANE. Answer: The only way that I have ever been able to explain the continuous family quarrel that goes on in so many homes is on the theor) that the participants love a fight. They find domesticity dull and monotonous and so they inject pep into it by their daily squabble. The spat that enlivens so many breakfast tables becomes a sort of matutinal cocktail that sets the blood circulating, and makes the eyes sparkle and gives them a mental jolt That is the only possible way by which you can account for people of ordinary intelligence having the same old row over the same old subject week in and week out, year after year. 0o man and woman can possibly live together for even a month without getting a good working knowledge of each sther's little peculiarities and idiosyncrasies, and finding out what subjects are as good for a hot argument as a nickel is for a ginger cake. With this information to gulde them and warn them, when they don't gumshoe around dangerous topics and sidestep each other's little ways, it is because they enjoy taking foolhardy risks, and are allured by the bright face of danger. Therefore, if you stop your father’ deprive them of their chief indoor sport That they have no right to take R at their children's expense is another matter, and one which, unfortunately, the belligerent parents do not take enough into consideration, for police reports show that the great majority of criminal and delinquent children come from homes like yours, in which there were quarreling parents. and mother’s daily quarrel, you will 1 am Interested in your saying that you will not stand from a husband the treatment your mother stands from your father. That is the point of view of the modern. self-supporting, independent young woman, and it is going to work a reformation in husbands. For when men find out that the only way to keep a wife is by giving her decent treatment, they are going to make the wife job more attractive than it is at present. DOROTHY DIX EAR MISS DIX I 1 am a young girl, an only child, and my father fairly worships me, but he doesn’t want me to get out of his sight. He won't let me go with other girls, or let me have any girl company, because he thinks they will put “ideas” in my head. He won't let me go to dances anv places »f amusement, and he would have fits if a boy even looked at me. He wants me to dress just as girls did in his ¢ and do as girls did then. Now, Miss Dix, I love my father and mother, but I am not interested in the things they are interested in, and T am bored to death when I have to sit up in the evening and listen to old folks’ talk. How can I make my dad see that no girl can live alone. that T am young and full of energy, and must have companions and amusement, and that now I am nothing but a poor, little miserable slave of love? SLAVE Answer: Go up into the attic, or wherever your mother keeps her treasures, and hunt around in her old trunks until you find the little packet of love letters which your father wrote her in his courting davs. Read a few of those mushy missives to him, in which he tells her that he cannot live another day without her, and in which he speaks of the parties they have been t and the moonlight drives they have taken in side-bar buggies with rubber tires That will bring back his ewn vouth to him, and make him re ze that when he was voung he wanted to do just exactly the same sort of things| vou want to do, and that his idea of a perfect evening no more consisted ting around listening to mother and father talk than yours does men forget how they felt when they were themselves in their children’s place and the man: v could put ithful desire for fun and companionship, youthful need to be always doing something It a gri uelty to deprive the young of the innocent pleasures that belong to their time of life, because youth passes so swiftly and the cares of life come to us so soon DOROTHY DIX ]DFEAR MISS DIX: Iam a girl in love with a married man. He says that he would rather die than live without me, and that if I will run aw; with him, he will divorce his wife and marry me. He is very goodlook and has winning ways, and I love him. What shall I do? WORRIED, Answer: They are generally good-looking and have winning w dear. these married men that win the hearts of poor little foolish girls, whom they can offer no honorable place in life. And they have a wonderful Hne of love talk—sweet enough to charm the very birds off the bushes. That is why girls listen to them without ever stopping to reflect that it is only experience in love-making that gives a man that sort of technique. It is a pity that so voung. If they did not, t is There is no need for me to tell you what a wicked thing it is for a girl to break up a man’'s home, to steal a wife's husband from her, and to orphan little children. You know that as well as I But consider the man’s proposition from vour own standpoint. only judge the man’s future by his past performance. You can He has been unfaithful to the woman to whom he is married. Will hrl be true to you? He has broken the oath he swore before God to be faithful to one woman. Will he keep his promise to vou? After he has got you, what nce do you think there will be he will divorce his wife and marry you? Not one chance in a mi Pretty poor prospect, isn't it? DOROTHY DIX (Copsright, that ion 1925.) Infinite Variety in Use of Scarfs BY MARY MARSHALL. be worn comfortably at mountain resorts and will undoubt- edly take a prominent place in Au- tumn sport clothes evervwhere Usually the most trying part of the long, scrawny neck is at the back. This spot can be the most charming or the least in a woman’s whole make- | up. You can remedy this trouble in almost any daytime frock by adding to it a crisp organdie collar that rolls up quite high at the back and opens to a V or square line in front. Many of the smart dressmakers are adding these little detachable organdie col lars to many of their frocks this Sum mer by request of fastidious custom ers who find they add becomingness as well as freshness to the appear- ance. The lnes of a woman's neck very)which may frequently betray her age more than anything else about her. Too great angularity is also often unpleasantly apparent only in the coutour of the neck. It is often rather reckless for a woman to go always about bare necked. While the present vogue for (Copyright. 1025.) Ma was in her room taking things out of one draw and putting them in another and I sed, Hay ma, did you notice the swell shine I gave my shoes? k Wy ves. their positively gleeming, ware you going? ma sed. Nowares speshil, I jest thawt Id like to have my shoes looking neet erround the house, I sed. My goodniss the age of miracles must of arrived all of a suddin, ma sed. Meening my shoes genrelly look as if they awt to have a shine insted of jest having had one, and I sed, You | awt to see my neck, too, ma, I bet its the cleenest looking neck you ever saw me zoing erround with. Well well, will wonders never ceese, wats come over you? ma. sed. Nuthing, Im jest changing my diff- rent ways and things, T sed. T jest changed my stockings a little wile ago because my other ones had 2 little, holes in them. They dident show SATIN RIBBON NECKPIECE WITH PLEATED GEORGETTE JABOT. scarfs remains there really is no ex- cuse for any woman to display an unattractive or age-betraying neck- line. Even with evening dress it is possible to float airy%tulle about one’s neck so that its outlines are not too vividly disclosed. Almost any scarf may be worn close about the neck, and there is an in- finite variety in the way that a scarf may be tied. Some of the new French scarfs are made with a definite collar piece which fastens round the neck like a collar with the ends falling at back or over shoulders. The sketch shows a smart neckplece composed of satin ribbon with end at back, while a long jabot of pleated georgette hangs at one side. A simpler scarf that you might make for yourself is made from a long scarf section of crepe de ching, with an eight or nine inch flounce at each end of pleated georgette to mutch, but I dont wunt to go erround with holes in my stockings, even little ones, I sed. This is too mutch, Im afraid Iil wake up and discover Im asleep, ma. sed. You dont feel eny wings sprout- ing on your shoulders, do you? she sed. Meening T was getting like a angel, and I sed, No mam, and G, ma, that reminds me, do you know 'that little china mustard jar with the little glass spoon? Certeny T know it, lzzent it one of my few last remaining wedding pres- ents? ma sed, and I sed, Well I axsi- dently dropped it and It axsidently broke. Well of all things for pity sakes, I mite of known there was something behind that long story of how won- derfill you are, ma sed, and I sed, The little glass spoon dident brake, ma, 0 iit | dark, JULY 11, 1925 What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. Cancer. aspects of tomorrow leave no room for doubt. as they do today. They are distinctly favorable, and, as a result, there will be engen dered a contented and happy feeling in keeping with the spirit of the.day. All Sunday observances, recreations or di versions will ord pleasurable amount of enjoyment, s The planetar: nd gatherings, either for religious or social purposes will be productive of good results even more so than on ordinary occa sions. If, as the signs denote, there should be experienced in the after noon a slight sense of irritation this will be of such short duration that it may, happily, s almost unnoticed A boy born tomorrow will be erratic | physically, and have many “ups and | downs” during his early childhood Regular nutrition and assiduous care will see him “‘over the top.” 1lis tem perament will be just as variable as his physical condition. At times he will be sunny and bright, at other times fll-tempered and sulky. As he grows up to manhood the good will overcome the bad, and he will mate. rialize into a “regular fellow.” A girl born tomorrow .will be normally healthy, and her disposition will be generous, kindly and winsome. She will, by her charm, attract many ad mirers, and the one she finally accepts as the one to accompany her through life will give her that happiness that she merits 1s July 12 vour hirthday possess much inherent vour varied talents can be, if you so| wish it, capitalized to a very success ful degree. You are a trifle fussy and more than usually fastidious in your tastes. You possess sound judg ment, are very upright and strictly conscientious in all your actions, and vle of attaining a degree of perfec tion in anything that you set out to do end to which vourself with lenergy and ab Owing to th ane. quick and unerring perception, you friends consider you very dependabie and often seek your advice and coun sel You are sMruistic with high ideals. and you seek harmonv and pleasant surroundings at all times. Discord, | either inside or outside your home, is most trying to you, and vour efforts avoid such a condition are both con stant_and consistent Well known persons date are: Benjamin P. Shillaber, hu morist; Daniel H. Hill, soldier; Clara Loutse Kellogg, soprano singer; Georg Eastman, menufacturer; Arthur Holbrook, physician; Irving T. B Bush Terminal founder. (Coyright, 10 HOME NOTES BY JENNY I so0, bility, and | you born on WREN. You who rooms to deal in this fdea of have very long living ith may be interested urnishing one end to suggest a small study “ here is a fireplace in the center of of the long walls of this room | A davenport placed at right it makes gives the “study sion. The big writing table is placed in a position to get a good light by day, and the small table lamp iluminates by night. This writing group of table and chair silhouetted against the h bindings of the books on | the corner shelves has that air of restfulness and dignity by which a | study should be distinguished. An- other note of interest is the globe that stands before the window (Copyright. 1025.) Color Cut-Out DICK WHITTINGTON. clear-cut division and an effect of seclu- A Friend. Now Dick’s room was in the garret and it was so full of rats and mice that he could not sleep at night. One day when he was out on the street he saw a little girl playing with a cat. He asked her if she would sell her cat for a penny and she said that she would Dick took it home with him and soon the garret was free from rats and mice. Every day Dick saved some of his food and carried it up to his pet. The cat became his best friend, the only real friend that he had. - Make Dick’s big cat a light maltese gray. Be sure to mount it on a piece of heavy paper—the cover of a maga- zine will do—before cutting out. match. The pleated georgette is at- tached to the crepe de chine by means of machine hemstitching. For the woman with scrawny neck there should be comfort in the new fashion for turtle-necked sweaters, you can allways keep that to remind you. O, leeve the room before I lose my pa;ience and give you a good slap, ma sed. ' o L N S T (Copyrirht. 1025.) . Some women swear like men, while others are so pious that they won't even darn socks, ¥ {ing a N WOMA N’S PAGE | (Copyright 1925.) & Across. smething impenetrable. udge. Complain. Divinely supplied food High priest of Israel A numbe Soothsave In addit You and Artic Aviator Poem Conjecture Arrangement of wood Permit Tormented, Provided Point of the compass. Boast Individually New York City (abbr.) Unclose (poetic). Dart swiftly (colloquial) Young girl. Serve. Concentrates Down. Surface. all retired valleys, Egyptian_sacred bull Note of the scale Pismi Destitute, ) & ividual Watering and Mulching. “Watering pots and sprinkling see; be an abomination to many ga deners,” T remarked one warm da) Yes." d Mr. Burbanl answe ‘sprinkling a garden is a picturesque pastime and a pledsant refreshment the leaves of a plant, but it does littl for the thirsty roots unless reduced a system which really saturates soil The garden beds should be deep enough in the first place for the roots to stretch comfortably down a laver where they will find an unfa ing supply of food and moisture. “And, secondly, soaking, and n urface sprinkling. is the right watering a garden. If the plants a in rows or in beds make a deep fu row or little trench with the hoe, ru ning the length of the border or dering through the bed so as to reac the different plants. in; then fill it again for the second a third time and replace the soil the beds m be thoroughly after sundown by letting the hose ru in different places, and the next mor ing loosen the soil and cultivate, mal in the mofsture. “This weekly face sprinkling “In watering young trees around the tree with the sides a fe: inches high. followed the next day and the ‘ground better still, the ill this with water and let it soak nd soaked ground mulch,’ which will keep soaking followed by cultivation is worth many days of sur- and shrubs a shallow basin may be made This basin can be filled with water several times and is to be | by cultivation | mulch.” or, perhaps a mulch of old manure, m i k to to o | | ot of re r- n n h w an n- k- = leaf-mold, grass clippings, straw, dead | WHEN WE GO SHOPPING BY MRS. HARLAND H. Household Textiles. It is interesting and very profitab once in a while, to check up on o buying habits. It is very easy get “out of balance” in househo purchasing, and thus really to low the standard of living in ilies by indulgence in some and a corresponding sacrifice others. Sometimes a woman has a passion for fine linens and she spends a great deal more than she can really affo for these things, while bedding, drap- ery, etc., may be neglected. We & gzet into these habits in one way another, but the change usual comes so slowly that we don't reali how far it has gone. There are too many borhood jealousies for to get very much benefit change of experiences on the rel tive costs of home supplies, so have to for anything scientifically helpful. Uncle Sam has come to_the resc: in recent vears by publishing d petty housewiv. tailed investigations into the cost of | posa as linen living. Most of this work is do through the Bureau of Labor Stati: tics of the Department of Labor Washington, and every woman w! makes a science of her housekeeping ought to get on the mailing list receive publications. Not long ago a very interesting set [nutmeg and a few sprigs o of figures was issued showing what (Then on the top place |lets, and add enough Words Fall s lightly as snow. Theyre easily, thoughtlessly said—| Yet hard words can enter the heart And lie there as heavy 2s lead. RO our fam- things neigh- of e announcements of all these le, | ur to 1d er | of rd all | or | 1y | ze | 1 we | Jow the others in ir look to outside mformm.mn: ue e ne s- at ho to | three (poetic) leaves, tan bark or sawdr sidewalk park water is poured t Tn the case ller growth Dertor plant and f This cannas in perf: that the slowh keep the plant : jected An excellent king and uncertain may be made a garde; rounding it with some of the sec ng_border plant “While we are might be well to speak mention thi hough sidered shade-loving 1 really do better. shallow a good e pt- et day. “Unlike most plants ohjection to bel dle of the day, but Summer afterncon b £ pansie: nts. ht, with them. twice roots, in watered ¢ nee or they have no (Copyri ALLEN. average families pay plies in the home, importance of each i 6,000 fami were get this information Thus we learn th spent for blankets leac housefurnishings de with curtains and sheets these very closely. We out every blankets are mad ton; one in five about one in five, mixed There are times as many towels used by these families as of linen, while cven cotton n: are three times a common as linen one Towel: about the for textile sup- the relati More t interviewed and e following udso find that ve these entire is all-wool and iilts and pillowcases me amount of mones from the family till, each tablecloths, window shades spreads making another tr that about 6,000 representa- hought n times as material this pur- spending for it three money. vear just be: we hear tive mauch families cotton times as much . Lamb Cutlets in Aspic. Lay in a saucepan six slices of fat bacon, one diced turnip, one sliced carrot, one sliced onion, a littl® grated parsley. lamb cut- stock to cover. nd _cook _slowly re tender. Remove the fire and let Remove the cut Put on the cove until the cutlets the saucepan from the contents cool lets when they are cold and press them between two plates. Drain the liquor and dissolve in it one and one- half heaping tablespoonfuls of pow- dered gelatin. When it begins to harden pour a layer of it into a dish. Lay the cutlets closely together on this and put the rest of the jelly on top. Allow to remain on ice for three hours. Mix one pint of cooked peas with half a point of the liquor or liquid aspic jelly, and set on ice to harden. Unmold the cutlets and cut them out with a cutlet-shaped cutter. Arrange the cutlets in a circle on a very cold dish and put the Jellied peas in the center. The first discovery of a disease- producing bacteriz was made by the French pathologist, Davaine, in 1254, in a study, of sheep anthrax.