Newspaper Page Text
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THE COQUETTISH NEGLIGEE.
IT IS CALLED A “SIESTA SLIT,” OR
A "HAMMOCK BOWS.”
Advice to Any AVoiimii AVho Chnnce*
to Have a Dollar Itnrninff a Hole
In Her Povket—Many Women Aoit
Comb Their Hair n la Gelatin to
Accord With the .Japanese Paion
Aon DlnwiAK Through the AVorlil
of Fanliion—Oriental Straw Slip
per* Are Another Indication of the
W ave of Popnlnrity From the Ea*t.
Sleeve* Grow Bigger Every Day,
nnd Below the Elbow They Ex
pand Tike a Pelican’* Ponch.
New York, June 20.—This is the sea
son tvhen feminine thoughts turn
yearningly to the coolest fabrics and
most breeze-inviting garments that can
be included in the summer wardrobe.
This is the month when the airy, fairy,
the almost imponderable, the daintily
graceful negligee is every woman's
heart's desire, and frankly it may be
confessed that the modern toilette da
repos, as the French woman prettily
expresses our idea of a lounging gown,
has attained a measure of artistic
charm that we never believed it cap
able of possessing. Of Chinese, Indian,
or French silk, of mercerized lawn, of
silky Minila gauze and of silk striped
madras, the happiest examples of tidy
ease in flowing drapery are so far to
be found. In the various shops where
they sell the cool costumes they go by
the name of “siesta suits," “hammock
gowns,” “napping robes,” “negligees"
and "breakfast dresses.”
The woman who has a fifty dollar
bill burning- her pocket may easily lay
out that whole sum on any one of
these two-piece suits, and purchase
therewith a robe fit to appear in at the
coronation. On the other hand, two
dollars and fifty cents will secure as
sweet a little Japanese breakfast frock
as any fastidious man should ever care
to see behind his silver coffee set.
The fifty dollars buys an imported
work of art in the finest white French
handkerchief lawn, hoar frosted with
such white needlework as is only done
in French convents. The petticoat of
such a suit swirls on the ground in the
rear, and the full flounce is set on to
jupe Itself by means of a garland of
t t t fe*~~ ~ '
TWO GAY TOILETS FOR THE BEACH.
embroidery. Sometimes the needle
work is achieved In the most delicate
blue and white on a white ground, or
the linen lawn is pale plumbago blue
with white needlework. The loose
waist, to accord with a skirt of thia
type, is often made with long Marie
Antoinette fronts that < mss the bust
to right and left, draw'n under the arm*
and fasten in the rear This lets fail
on the back of the skirt two long,
pointed, fill-edged ends that form a
sash-tike ftnieh The finest w-hlte cor
set cover aud under petti' oat must b*
worn with such a break feet dress, and
slim women find it ne y to brae*
their figures *lth nothing mors sub,
than u*e shwtl, light lap# cot'
Pongee liOiinglDg Robe*.
Far less costly than these veritable
confections are the pretty pongee neg
ligees, made on the same model and
edged with tea-stained footing, though
the coolest fabric in the world is
pure white Habutal silk. This is not
expensive; it washes like a towel, and
a little Valenciennes edging is all the
trimming needed. Many of the silk
lounging robes have straight, deeply
hemmed skirts, and the upper garment
is cut like a Greek pepium or like a
farmer’s smock, with the difference
that the modern garment fastens
down the left side of the front.
All the odds and ends of dimity,
lawn and organdie from the /counters
were sent a few weeks ago to the
manufacturing departments of the dry
goods shops and thriftily made into
kimono suits, that now heap the bar
gain tables at compelling prices. These,
in white or colors, prove absolutely
irresistible to the comfort loving wo
man. and so gay, and pretty and be
coming are they, and so ridiculously
inexpensive, that three or four are
carried off by every shopper. They
all consist of a round full skirt, with
a deep hem and a hip long kimono
blouse. Sometimes a white suit has
its skirt, sleeves and blouse edges all
faced with a color, or a sprigged blue
and white dimity suit has solid blue
borders all about. The borders are
most effectively set on with a hem
stitch beading, and the women who
possess a talent for dressing up any
little toilet have taken to wearing
strings of coral beads with their open
necked kimono blouses.
A .Japanese Mood.
So decidedly Japanese is our mo
mentary mood, swayed no doubt by
the kimono suit, that many women do
up their hair for the morning with
white carved bone Geisha pins. Some
of these are of amber celluloid, and
NEGLIGEES FOR ALL AGES.
the basic principle, and shape of the
appliance is that of the ordinary black
wire pin. The difference is in the long,
delicate and more or less carved horn
that stick out two or three inches from
the bowed end of the prong. Some
women whose hair is thin and whose
heads are sensitive in summer find it
a genuine comfort to use the true
Geisha pins that are nothing more
than long, white or colored bone knit
ting needles, with ends carved in lace
like open cvork. Two such pins, prop
erly adjusted, will hold up a suit of
hair in a cool, coquettish knot that to
most faces is distinctly becoming.
The Oriental straw slipper is enjoy
ing a summer b ase of popularity along
with the dimono suit und the Geisha
hairpin. Women who have straight,
well formed extremities dress them,
for family view on the piping hot days,
in ail lace lisle hose, and then put
their toes into the points of it pair of
straw Hong Kong sandals. It Is the
next coolest tiling to enjoying the
blessed privileges of tiie barefoot boy
The lli si'll Slid Its I lle-rllrs,
The joys of the well arranged negli
gee lead one very naturally to the out
liberties of I It* h• he*, where, Juet Ml
the iianii'iii, some new pongee water
4im*u sir expel normally disponing
, themselves, and whets the gun pleat-
SAVANNAH MORNING NEWS: SUNDAY. JUNE 22. 1902.
ed swimming gown strikes envy to
the hearts of all the feminine behold
ers. The pongee referred to is not the
real Oriental silk, but a clever Ameri
can adaptation and combination of
mohair and silk for seagoing uses.
How well the combination In tan re
sults is shown in a, sketch of a bath
ing suit made up with a trimming of
white mohair, decorated with dank
brown embroidered rings. The mo
hair forms the collar, belt and cuff
finhs for the waist, and the blouse,
though buttoned firmly under its fly
front, Is further decorated by adjust
ing straps of dark brown wool braid.
Dark brown hose and a hat of white
stitched linen, bespattered with little
embroidered brown spots, makes up
the quite perfect suit.
The companion to this is an extreme
ly coarse, woolly veiling in dark blue,
very deeply accordion pleated from
bust to hem. The yoke is a
plain, bright blue flannel that
matches the belt, and though
the fancy for such suits is of
extremely modern origin, it promises
to grow with the summer. The heavy
veiling holds little water, and while it
possesses all the virtues of flannel, it
has none .of the weight of that worthy
material. The charm of the accordion
pleat needs no dilation to the very thin
woman, who will recognize in it a boon
and a blessing, and these bathing
gowns are so firmly pleated that no
amount of wetting and drying injures
the flexity of each crease.
Pelican Pouched Sleeves.
So far as the season has progressed
it is safe to say that sleeves are big
ger than ever before, taking the arm
snugly from shoulder to elbow
and thence expanding like the
pouch of a pelican, and always on the
outside of the arm. Another conclu
sion to be drawn has reference to the
tulle neck bow. In the winter and
early spring we wore it only in white-,
now we wear it In colors and In com
binations. Navy blue and parrot green
tulle, twisted together and spraying
out in a big variegated bow under the
chin or under the back hair, is con
sidered a very smart device. Up to
date we have not seen over many dark
blue gowns trimmed with parrot, moss,
emerald or opaline green silk, but fore
warned is forearmed, and this combi
nation is sure to have a wholesale
popularity when autumn shopping be
comes necessary. This idea is signified
as the grand chic in Paris, and some
notion of how it is carried out Is shown
in the sketch of a copy from a Parisian
model. This is a summer frock of navy
blue nun’s veiling, the skirt arranged
in three shaped flounces and a front
panel. Each flounce is bordered with
a band of emerald green taffeta pretti
ly needleworked in a simple design of
contrasting tones of green and blue
A LOUNGING SMOCK OF CREPE
AND LACE.
The waist has a yoke vest and halt
sleeves of gTeen taffeta, embroidered
in alternating blue and lighter me*
dots. A hat of green straw garnished
with big blue plumes is the proper
crown for this agreeable color study.
Au liilrniassiil American.
Most hats, by the way, have their
edges narrowly bound with velvet, and
fewer conapicuoua jewel ornaments are
used than we have observed in six
months or more. Ribhon arid flowers
or ribbon and feathers have come to
lake the place of the baroque, sml art
pouvenu, ar.d rhinestone brooches ami
buck lea and tSie ■ fiange is not Mlmliy
unwclcoined The flowers continue to
sfiuggie with marvelous ertifiiiel
tniMs and vegetables for mlliineiy u
-pi ciwwi y.
The ft ape starve, In gilt, silver, paarl
or natural colors, was full, but very
short. We did grapes to death in about
six weeks, and now the effort is to find
some kindly fruit of the earth that
not appetlzingly appear at one and the
same time on a million or more straw
frames. One rich woman rejoiced the
other day to find a box of exquisitely
copied petit pois vines at once in fruit
and flower. These had just come over
from Paris. In order to stifle imita
tion she bought up the whole consign
ment from the importing milliner, and
after having one smart hat trimmed
with the fruiting, blooming pea vines
she calmly burnt all the rest.
Of course, this is the coming colon
Some few gowns show it already,
peeping along the front edges of their
smart taffeta coats, binding the tops
of their high dress waist stocks, oc
casionally illuminating a fanciful cuff
finish or narrowly strapping a hand
some lace blouse. The color we refer
to is ochre, and it is promised a whole,
sale predominance in the autumn. Per
haps it can be pushed by sheer weight
of fashionable prestige, but it is not
becoming to the majority, and it re
quires a few more seasons yet to firm,
ly and finally dismiss turquoise blu*
from its proud position as the finishing
touch to every smart suit.
Alary Dean.
RHIBARB RECIPES.
A Delicious .Jelly, Fool, Pie and Pud
ding to Be Made With Little Trou
ble or Expense.
Now that market gardeners are so
extensively forcing vegetables under
glass, rhubarb may be had at any
season of the year.
The prudent housekeeper, however,
always waits for a glut in the mar
ket and lays in a supply when it is
cheap, for many palatable sweets may
be made from it.
It is a common but most mistaken
reftement to peel rhubarb. The thin
skin cannot be distinguished from the
pulp after cooking, and beside adding
to the flavor, it gives a very pretty
pink tinge, while peeled rhubarb al-
WHITE SUMMER FROCKS FOR THE LITTLE PEOPLE.
ways has a most uninviting green
color.
Rliulinrb .Icily.
Wash and wipe nice red stalks of
rhubarb, cut into inch pieces and put
in a stone dish. To every six pounds
of fruit add the thin peel of three
good sized lemons; set the jar in a
moderate oven and cook till quite ten
der. When cooked, pour off the juice
and add the juice of the three leiTG
ons. Let this simmer gently for half
an hour and strain through a jelly
bag. To every pint of juice add one
pound of granulated sugar and let it
boil very gently for forty minutes.
Pour into glasses and cover when
cool.
llhnbarli Fool.
Stew rhubarb with half a lomen rind,
a stick of cinnamon ,and sugar to
taste. When it has boiled down re
move from the fire and pass it through
A NAVY BLUE NUN S VEILING.
a sieve. Beat half a teacupful of
cream until quite stiff and stir into a
pint of rhubarb. Serve in glasses.
A I'fe.
A deep-dish rhubarb pie Is a good
thing to try. Take a pudding dish and
cut into it some red stalks of rhu
barb. Sprinkle over this two teacup
fuls of light brown sugar and the
grated rind of a lemon. Set it in the
oven to soften and meanwhile pre
pare n light upper crust, and roll It
out quite thin. Take the fruit from
the oven, let it coll a bit, and cover
with the crust. Return to the oven
and bake till the crust is brown.
Ilubrif liliubwrb I'lMliflng.
Into a gallon of boiling salted water
throw half a teacupful of rice. 801 l
exactly ten minutes. Turn Into a col
ander and drench with cold water.
Put a layer of rice Into a pudding
pan, then a layer of silted rhubarb,
well sugared and sprinkled with cin
namon; then another layer of rice,
and flnailv a layer of rhubarb Rake
until the rhubatb I* soft, and reive
with or without cream
—c'aiuet a* rouble for deaths Iff
•vary la,ww Lu u>t mwiili/,
COMMANDED TO THE QUEEN.
A Drllghtfnl Story of Alexandra and
an American Woman.
Here Is a brand-new story of her
majesty, Alexandra, soon to be crown
ed queen and empress. It was told
with quiet glee by the other actor in it,
to various and sundry American
friends. The other actor is the wife of
a famous ship owner, and head of a
firm of shipbuilders. Thus she has been
for years the heart and soul of various
charities connected with England’s
merchant marine. She is further cred
ited with having influenced her hus
band in affairs of fairly international
importance. Altogether she is as near
to being a personage as a long purse,
a clear head, a w r arm heart, and a
charming social tact can, make one in
the home of hereditary distinctions, the
British Isles.
One of the latest charities Is a great
seamen’s hospital. Royalty deigned to
lay the cornerstone of it, and after
wards to express great interest in its
success. Ie began to be hinted that a
peerage would reward the people who
had built and endowed it. That was
an agreeable if distant prospect. It
seemed to grow suddenly nearer and
clearer when the lady found herself
abruptly “commanded to the Queen’’ —
and that within the brief space of an
hour.
“What did I think of first%" she said
in telling it: "Why that I had not
a single absolutely new rag to appear
in. Clothes? O! Yes—plenty, and fine
enough for court-wear, but then one
want special things for special occa
sion. What made matters worse was,
I myself had a. luncheon on hand —we
were, in fact, just sitting down to the
table when the royal message reached
me. I dare say I turned ail colors as I
read, but luckily nobody noticed. In
stantly I sent word to my maid to get
other clothes ready, then went on en
tertaining my guests as best I might,
through the first courses. I knew to
a fraction of a second how long it
would take to dress and drive from any
own home to Buckingham Palace: 1
knew also that while the Queen herself
is never very punctual it would not do
at all for me to be late, and still less
to be early. You can fancy my state
of mind, lunching against the clock
both ways. Presently I left my sister
to explain my going, and was soon roll
ing off to see the Queen.
“Of course, I thought of many things
on the way, but chiefly of the hospital.
It must be that which had caused the
Queen to send for me. Then foolishly
I let my mind stray to a schoolmate,
one Mary Z—who it happens had been
a girl friend of the Queen, in the days
when King Christian was not a king
at all, only a poor Danish prince, and
glad to increase his income of twelve
hundred dollars a year, by giving les
sons in drawing, to the pupils of a
girls’ school. Mary had told me many
stories of her friend Alexandra. I
knew also that in the annual gather
ings at Freidensborg, the two nearly
always met. I wondered a little if they
had -met this last year. It had brought
changes to both—a crown to Alexandra,
and a second husband to Mary, who
had for years been a widow and
thought to be inconsolable. But my
mind did not linger on her very long—
my concerns—our concerns indeed, were
so much more immediate, and living.
I had a fair general Idea, of how such
private audiences went off, but was
hazy as to whether I should kneel, or
merely courtesy and kiss hands.
“The palace authorities coached me
the least bit. A lady in waiting met
me. took me up stairs and along pas
sages, and at last left me to myself
after telling me that the queen though
quite deaf hated of all things to have
voices raised in speaking to her. I
must speak rather slowly, and very
distinctly—her own quick intelligence
would do the rest. As to deportment
I must follow her indications—stand or
sit, or retire, at what I judged to be
her will. But she would make it easy
for me—this I was assured—she made
everything easy as far as court
etiquette permitted.
“Before I had time to get nervous
a lackey whisked me into the presence.
There stood the queen, looking very
sweet and unroyal, smiling, holding
out her hand, and murmuring my name.
After our formal-informal greeting,
she led me to a chair a little at one
side, and sat down herself in another
almost touching it. And then she said
with a yet more engaging smile:
“ ’I am so glad you have come, I
want to talk with you over Mary
Z 's second marriage. She has told
me often how much you were her
friend. Do you think .she can pos
sibly be happy with a man so unlike
her first choice?”
“And that was, I found out abso
lute truth. For at least half an hour
we gossiped, talking over our friend’s
affairs with the most bourgeoise in
terest. Afterward—well her majesty
said kind things of u—my husband
and myself, and especially kind ones
of our hospital project. But this was
wholly incidental—she had sent for me
to talk over Mary's marriage.”
Which goes to prove how well Kip
ling knew womenkind when he wrote:
“The Colonel's lady and Judy O'Orady,
Are sisters —under their skins.”
GOOD HEALTH
fan only be obtained by keeping the
blood pure and the digertton perfect.
For tlile purpoae Hnstette’s Atom*
&th Hitter* ( Introduced fifty
years ago. and to-day It la recogniz
ed aa the leading health restorer in
the world. It will cure Dyspepsia.
Ihllousneee, Flatulency and Malaria
Ksvsr and Ague. Try It.
HOSTETTER’S
Stomach flitters.
Sore
Hands
Palms, and Painful Finger Ends.
One Night Treatment
Soak the hands on retiring in a strong, hot,
creamy lather of CUTICURA SOAP. Dry,
and anoint freely with CUTICURA, the great
skin cure and purest of emollients. Wear, during
the night, old, loose kid gloves, with the finger
ends cut off and air holes cut in the palms. For
red, rough, chapped hands, dry, fissured, itching,
feverish palms, with shapeless nails and painful
finger ends, this treatment is simply wonderful,
and points to a speedy cure of the most distress
ing cases when physicians and all else fail.
MILLIONS USE CUTICURA SOAP
Assisted by Cuticura Ointment, for preserving, purifying, and beau
tifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dan
druff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and
Boothing red, rough, and sore hands, for baby rashes, itchings, and
chafings, and for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery.
Millions of Women use Cuticura Soap in the form of baths for
annoying irritations, inflammations, and excoriations, for too free or
offensive perspiration, in the form of washes for ulcerative weak
nesses, and for many antiseptic purposes which readily suggest them
selves to women and mothers. Cuticura Soap combines delicate
emollient properties derived from Cuticura- the great 6kin cure, with
the purest of cleansing ingredients, and the most refreshing of flower
odours. No other medicated soap is to be compared with it for pre
serving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, scalp, hair, and hands.
No other foreign or domestic toilet soap, however expensive, is to be
compared with it for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery.
Thus it combines in One Soap at One Price, the best skin and
complexion soap, and the best toilet and baby soap in the world.
Complete External and Internal Treatment for Every Humour, sl.
Consisting of Cuticura Soap (20c.), to cleanse the skin of crusts
anil scales, and soften the thickened cuticle; Cuticura Oi.M
-£ll I I {LI! IVJ ment (50c.), to instantly allay itching, inllainmation and irrita
wMwM* ** tion, and soothe and heal; and Cuticura Resolvent Fills
—. ~ .e | (26c.), to cool and cleanse the blood. A Single Set is often suffl
■HO Set 3* I cient to cure the most torturing, disfiguring, itching, burning,
and scaly skin, scalp, and blood humours, rashes, itchings, and irritations, with loss of
hair, when all else fails. Sold throughout the world. British Depot: 27-28, Charterhouse
Sq., London. French Depot: 5 Rue de la Paix, Pans. Potter Drug axd Chem. Coup.,
Sole Props., Boston, u. S. A.
Cuticura Resolvent Pills (Chocolate Coated) are anew, tasteless, odourless, econom
ical substitute lor the celebrated liquid Cuticura Resolvent, as w ell as for all other blood
purifiers and humour cures. Put up in screw-cap pocket vials, containing 00 doses, price,
250. Cuticura Pills are alterative, antiseptic, tonic, and digestive, and beyond ques
tion the purest, sweetest, most successful and economical blood and skin purifiers,
humour cures, and tonic-digestives yet compounded.
MAi. JAGE OF GOOD .TEMPER.
Mrs. Harriet Prescott Spofford Sajs
That Amiability la the Secret ot
S Wedded Happiness.
By HARRIET P. SPOFFORD.
If it were necessary to give an opin
ion as to what is the first and chief
constituent cf a happy’ marriage one
might hesitate for a moment 6ver the
thought of many almost indispensable
virtues, and dally over that of abso
lute trustfulness on both sides, but one,
if thinking and weighing deliberately,
wbuld decide presently that the real
requisite for happiness in marriage is
good nature. Not that a tempest once
in a great while may not be worth
while to clear the air and to show how
good the other is, but in the long,
round year the sunshine and fair
weather is the best.
What will you not pardon to a sun
ny-faced rogue? A man may commit
countless peccadilloes, a thousand of
fences against good taste, even be
guilty of sins, but an unfailing sweet
ness of disposition will win forgiveness
for them all. A woman may be ex
travagant, a poor housekeeper, even
slatternly, or a provoker of scandal,
but there is no disruption in the house
hold of which she is mistress as long
as with a smile she acknowledges her
fault, though her sin is ever before us.
A pair of dimples has saved many a
little scamp from a whipping; they are
just as useful when the scamp is older
and the dimples are slipping into wrin
kles. For the dimple is not only evi
dence of the smile itself, but it stimu
lates the smiles of others.
Who can rebuke too sharply or too
frequently when reproach is always re
ceived without retort, without affront?
Who is not made to feel upon the spot
that good nature is better than any
impeccability?
We have, most of us, seen exquisite
housekeepers who all but follow the
the intruder about with a broom, who
are ready to dust the chair you rise
from, require overshoes to be left out
side the door; who, if you take a book
from one room and lay it down, carry
it back before your eyes; who make
more circumstance of broken china
than of broken bones. And most of
us prefer for a companion the home
body, who makes no fuss about any
thing, but who is tender and caressing
and gay and consoling and sympathet
ic and always sweet tempered, al
though there be fluff on her floors, und
nicks on her dishes, and no-meul ready
at Its appointed hour. And most of
us. again, rather than with the petu
lunt and fault-finding man. or with the
stern and sour and solemn incarnation
of all the virtue*, or with the lofty and
superior soul, without whose wisdom
and learning the u'orld could not re
volve, would choose companionship
with the off-hand, happy-go-lucky fel
low, who, If the dinner Is late, says
“ Never mind; It will he all the latter
when It does come," or If we ourselves
are late for church or th*Ater or out
ing, aeya: "Wall, we wilt enjoy It all
the more when we get there," or. It
the servants are rebellious, condones it
b> declaring “VVr isn’t aspect perfec. I
tloo for the prt-e we pay." And tins’
man may have hie baiter faults, be
may not be at home as much as you
would like, he may be too careful about
the spending of his money, he niay
have various habits unpleasant to you;
but you love him quite aside from
them; you regard them as exterior af
fairs for which he is hardly responsi
ble; you find someone else to be
blamed for them, he himself is the sun
ny creature w'ho brightens gloom wher
ever he goes, and of whose love you
I feel assured, whether in truth it is
yours or not. And after all the assur
ance of love produces happiness.
In fact, good nature is a charm that
never dies. Beauty fades, accomplish
ments fall, but good nature survives
till ail else falls to dust. It blends the
opposing and contradictory elements
like a fortunate sd*vent. It acts pre
cisely as sunshine does, and where you
find it happiness flourishes and life is
enriched. In any individual it declares
the existence of a calm and strong
nervous temperament and nothing
lends itself more to peace and prosper
ity in a household than that. It is a
blessed thing, then, that such a trait
can be established; that repression
here and expression there, and deter
mination everywhere will make it grow
and th-ive and become a habit. It is
the outer embodiment of love; and the
man who is seldom without it is the
one to whom the town turns, on whom
the beggars smile, after whom the
children run, whv? presence
trouble, and whose wife Is sure that
even if she wears her old bonnet, she
is lovely in his ey£s.
The Potato a* a Medicine.
From the Literary Digest.
The good results of administering
potatoes in certain forms of diabetes
are affirmed by a French physician. Dr-
MosseTwho states that he has ef 3 ao
cures by this means. "M.
thinks,” says the Revue Scientinque.
“that this treatment probably acts -
alkalinlzation of the' humors, in
same way as the treatment by the
kaline mineral waters of
sides this, potatoes contain oxy® •
and bring to the tissues ferments v
orahle to those oxidations that are
itually retarded in diabetes P 3t '
The quantity of potatoes that shorn
be taken by the invalid varies >
two and one-naif to three times ;
of the bread eaten. But altered P ■
toee should not be employed; when .
lied, they contain sugar: in too ' .
a me ;ium they begin to sprout
thf-lv i mlnntlon also develops •us ■
as w 1! • colanln." . .
The writer remark* that in
spring, when potatoes are scarce,
not very good, potato-bread ma.
used to advantage, although
known. This Is ( repnred by *>'* "*'
In proportions voi " ■ pn ‘j,
ter to one-third. ""
like ordinary bread v mu't
hie to person* who 1 1,1 'J' 1 ' 0 f
have plenty of the lulter. TM 1 • g
the potato Instead of bread g
the body of certain useful ph®-P ' bll j
that are contained In the Ist ■ #
this objection may be removed, ■
told, by adding egg* to the u.' <•
dally th* yolk*.
-- Mr Asquith.the English
•aid In i speech at a re<eut pic**
uet ihst nearly ever member ®
present British Cabinet, Ibini
inh r itov if bad worked for to *
•t on* urn* or anoihar