This
is the
Wedding Dress Lady Angela Scott
Go
Wore last month
OWN is of heavy satin, the soft white of a creamy rico
pudding. Wide band of smocking from throat to knee. draws gown close to figure, emphasises waist (that strip took two embroideresses a day and a half to do), Dress other- wise unornamented. Sheath sleeves, buttoning up skin tight and shaped like an arum lly where they reach over the hands. Fan train springs from back of gown.
HEA
EAD-DRESS made from about 4 square yards of foamy --net-and-mounted-with-bridal-veillent to the bride, who
is a sister of the Duchess of Gloucester, by her mother- in law, Lady Susan Dawnay. Wreath of unreal orange blossoms. LOWERS: crescent of living flowers, all white: roses, tulips,
Jilles-of-the-valley, stephanotis.
FLOW
Your Home ca pay for itself
MA
TANY women who are good at home. making and have comfortable houses of their own wish to add to their
income.
If you have on available spare room, it is n good Iden to take a paying guest. Put an advertisement in a nowspaper, and seek the help of friends and relatives. If it is known to business houses and schools that you have an empty room, they are likely to send you pro- spective clients.
Remember that it is the atmosphere of your home that makes it comfortable to live in. Make your guest feel that your house is a second home. Remember the little things: the cup of tea in bed, really hot shaving water, well-cleaned shoes, and nasly cooked and well. sorved breakfast make people feel well cared for. Do not belittle early morning efficiency. It pays in the end.
Do not be niggardly in small things. See that there is always plenty of soap in the bathroom and your spare room; and a few flowers are well worth their cost. Be cheerful when you can. There is a good deal of irritation in a day's work, no matter how good the fob, and it is a relief to be able to shed it on reaching home.
If your guest has an accident and breaks or damages your things, make light of it. In any case, he will probably offer to repair the damage, so no real harm is done.
If there is any complaint to make, do it in a reasonable manner. It is a mistake to create an atmosphere of suspicion. Talk it over in a quiet way,-and-you will find that overy- thing works out all right.
A bid-xitting room can be very dreary at times, no matter how com- fortable it is. Ask your guest to sit
with you sometimes, and make It possible for him to entertain his friends.
Variety is the apice of food. It need not necessarily be more expen- alve than usual, but your guest will appreciate it more if he does not know every meal in advance. A little surprise often coaxes a Lired stomach shd soothes a tired brain.
Naturally, you are taking a pay- ing guest to increase your own security and peace of mind. Do not forget the other side of the picture. Your boarder is not in his own home. Be friend to him and he will never forget it. His luck and your fame will spread far and wide. But re- member that a bad name travels farther and faster than a good one.
The knack of making people happy and contented is your capital. Make the bent of it.
QUIET CORNER
Four seasons meet
THROUGH the gap half-way up the lane ono.comes to a amali stretch of ground which is like a cross-roads where four ecusons meet.
..
Close to the hedge stands the yellow rick of whoststraw. from last summer's crop. The hunt- chor is at work on it, anxious to bo Anished before darkness falls. He climbs up his ladder rathor as the thrush at evening mounts higher up the tres to make the most of daylight.
The plough standa idle at a furrow's end, where half the fold is being fallowed for the next year's wheat, ****
The other half is green with the corn which will yield the. coming harvest.
Near the dividing line is a relio of many seasons past, an oblong section of a blackened. hayrick, which stands liko somo. mysterious altar bearing a burnt- offering to the gods of farming.
COUNTRYMAN.
NAME CHART
PATIENCE
Symbol:
A Puritan maiden in an old-world
garden.
THIS name expresses hopefulness and the
A-power-to~ attract--others-by-a-quick- mentality,
Your lucky day is Wednesday, and your best hours are the third after sunrise and the hour before midnight. Your lucky, day of the month the 26th.
For your jewels choose cornellans. They. will bring you joy and happiness, and protect you against misfortune.
Mixed colours are most in harmony with the name of Patience. Green and white com- bined together are good and will soothe your
nerves.
Your flower is acacia, and your lucky number is five,
You can make moulds
from all kinds of
MEATS
FROM
FROM jellies and pudding to beef loaf and brawn, the mould has in- numerable uses. It will turn the odd piece of cold meat from amor- phous mince into a stately edifice.
In its smallest form, when known as a dariolo mould, it makes dainty luncheon dishes of jellied chicken, rabbit, fish, or vegetables, and also those contio muddings which were favourites of one's
youth.
Use only the best galatino for making jelly, and, when practice has made you almost perfect In the matter of consistency, you should get few failures If the following instructions are carried out.
Always rinse the mould in cold water and let the sides of it be wat before pulting in the jelly. When the time comes to turn it out, immorso the mould for a moment in hot water. Thick earthenware moulds will naturally need a little longer, time than metal ones..
Thon put the dish for your jelly on top of the mould and turn them over. Don't shake vigorously as if you were expecting a cocktail to emerge. Give a downward, jerk only, and, thon remove the mould carefully as though you were a conjurer performing a very remarkably trick. We hope you are.
Meat shapes are not usually so refractory, and, before they are put.
in, the mould should be brushed over with olive oil or butter, an
To make cold meat into a hot mould, take a pound of it and mince it, Mix it with a quarter of a pound of breadcrumbs,. an onion finely chopped, pepper, salt, a pinch of grated nutmeg, two beaten egg and enough stock to molaton.
Drawn by ROBB
-POEM
Who is the Friend of Friends?—— \
not one teho smiles.
While you are prosperous,—.
purso-full, in Jair fante, Flattering, "Come, be my house-
kold's altar-flame,”
When knowing you can buske on
sunny isles:
Not ono who sayeth, "That
brain's a'mighty mould,” With base-coin'd hints about
alloys in gold:
Nor he who frankly tells you all
your faults,
But drops all merit into vam
piro vaults:—
No: the true friend stands close
'midat circling storms, When you ard poor,-lost-
wrestling thro" a cloud; With whom your ship rides high
in freezing calms,
its banner, ghostly pale, to him
still proud;
Whone heart's Blest-Arab-spice
dead hope embalms,
The same, tho' you sale throned,
or waiting for your shroud.
R. HENGIST HORNE (1803-188↓).
Menu
THE HONGKONG TELEGRAFII,SATURDAY, MAY 197, 191677
MEAT SOUP WITH
- BREAD BALLS
FISH PIE
STEWED RHUBARB
THE second and third courses are well known. For the firat, soak a couple of thicke slices. of state bread in cold water and then squeeze as dry as possible. Now beat this bread up in a basin, using a fork, with # tea- of grated onion, a ful of Anely-chopped parsley, the grated rind of a lemon, a teaspoonful mixed
herbs, salt, pepper (black), a pinch of ground ginger, a touch
of nutmeg and some dry bread-
стить.
LYONS
1,250,000 PACKETS SOLD EVERY DAY
TEA
POPULAR Throughout.
THE WORLD
DISTRIBUTORS. H. LANGSTON, Exchanga Building, HONG-KONG J. Lyons & Co., LTD.. LONDON
Bind with a beaten OUR SPECIAL CLEARANCE
egg, and make little marbles of the mistura. Let there porch di the soup for 20 minutes before
you serve it.
“Imagine — milk that keeps frosh
ON A PANTRY. SHELF !"
KUM KLIM
THAT milk is Klim
powdered milk.
Rich, pure cows milk with only the water removed.
Add water to Klim and you have liquid milk with fresh, natural flavour
and the full nourish- ment... of the finest milk. Excellent for babies.
THE MILK THAT KEEPS
OFFER
OF
LADIES' SHOES
AT
250 500 700
ENDS TO-DAY
SATURDAY
MAY, 30TH
VERY FEW NOW LEFT
GORDON'S LTD.
ICED BOURN VITA
Turn it into a greased mould and steam it for an hour.
- The flavours can be varied accord- ing to the sort of meat which is being used up. Parsley and thyme, for instance, would go very well with veal, Inushrooms with beef or mutton, and sage with pork.
If the meat has insufficient fat of its own, add a proportion of minced fat bacon to it.
Serve the mould with a well- nenɛoned brown For tomato sauco poured round it.
Lastly, a sweet.
Steam a pound of prunes, until they aró very soft. Take out the stones and crush the prunes smoothly in a basin. Crack the stones, and spift the kernels in two.
Sweeten the prunes with moist sugar, add the kernels and steam' the mixture in a plain, alled mould for an hour. Serve, cold with whip. pod cream or custard.
19 QUE
Cadbury's
BURN-VIT
DRINK
KEEPS YOU
COOL
REFRESHED
AND
FULL OF
ENERGY
JOHN
Sola Agents:
"HUTCHISON & CO.