TP: SUNDAY 01G0NIAfr0KTIND,; MAX 21, liHJor
8
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W I
Most 'American girls can easily decide
for" themselves the question of vocation.
The majority o them marry -when their
ears of girlhood and Its gaieties are past.
But the 'girl who. through Xorco of cir
cumstances, must work to earn her daily
bread and who would not deviate from the
purely womanly which she must retain to
make marriage the consummation of her
Ideals the problem of vocation is not
easj-
We hear it said that woman, through
love of Independence and aggressive self
ishness, Is advancing to occupy positions
men should hold rather than, according
to nature's laws, be mother and mistress
of the home. But facts are truthful and
whatever the cause may be there are
among us mkny young women who
must work to live.
If questioned, it is generally revealed
that father is .dead. Or he may have
failed both in health and wealth,, leaving
a family of daughters dependent upon
themselves. To such girls I am talking
you who are well-bred. Intelligent, but
are forced to battle against the world. If
you want to marry be a nurse. Few
girls have ideals centered about anything
that could be higher than a perfect home
and such a one will not usually be dis
appointed in attaining her heart's? desire
if she enters the field of nursing
You may be secretary, or stenographer,
or clerk, the salaries are sufficient) yet
there Is always the difference of posi
tion between a girl and her employer
which, though she may ignore, is not
easily overcome. It is not so with the
professional trained nurse. Her position
deserves men's highest respect at all
times which tends to develop In her a per
sonality and elevation of character that
few Cornell can maintain in any other
work. It teaches her to. control the minor
weaknesses of her disposition, and by the
example of superior nurses set constantly
before her, the highest types of pure wo
manhood are developed.
A Tiurse's life Is not a poem, nor are
the high standards always obtained, but
nurses, as students, are such a jolly lot
of girls, and fun, so necessary a recre
ation, that a sense of humor and the
ludicrous conceives many a sidelight of
comedy in the tragedies of life which so
balances it that a nurse Is rarely despon
dent, never sad.
Here iis that one finds the large bux
om girl nicknamed "Billy" or "Sam" and
she who during her probation makes some
unheard-of blunder carries through all
her course a suggestive name 'to remind
hr ofthat event. V t . '
dUpTHrlety'ifteposjnoTis?!
arid are not unlike 6thor girts.
The llttlo red-haired nurso who is
known as "Reddy" has a gentle but de
spondent -patient down the half in No.
10, and does many things to arouse her
enthusiasm. A great commotion occurs
one day when Bcddy rushes into No. 10,
plumps herself upon the bed and presses
her electric- button till the bell rings
furiously in the diet kitchen. Every
nurse in the ward hearing it thinks No.
10 must be suffocating, and rushes to
Iteddy's aid. Itcddy looks up innocently
and asks In a weak voire for the janitor
to please adjust the sunlight In the gar
den. Perhaps it then dawns upon the bunch
of girls that Reddy is personating a very
fat and fussy Senator's wife, No. S. who
requires assistance from the entire hos
pital staff when she wishes to descend in
pomp to the garden for her morning air
ing. As Reddy walks very sedately down the
hall a few minutes later, a superinten
dent nurse who happens to be passing ob
serves Various covert winks in the direc
tion of Reddy. Roddy's face Is a .study,
and thojsuperlntendent passes on, aware
that something has occurred which she
is unable to fathom.
Miss "Witty gets in her sharpest barbs
when Dr. So and So, who has recently
been installed as youngest member of
Modjeska Talks of the Staj
DON'T blame girls for going on the !
1 stage, although I don't encourage it.
Even without talent they stand one good j
chance they may marry a rich husband!"
Mmo. Modjeska laughed as she said it,
and her bright eyes twinkled. Then, "but
that holds good of typewriters, too," she
added.
The great Polish actress, who has come
on from her California home to appear at
her testimonial in the Metropolitan Op-era-House,
New York, tomorrow night,
carries into private life the dignity of
manner and charm of personality which
playgoers recall in her Lady Macbeth and
Mary Stuart.
"I never encourage young women to go
on the stage unless they show, marked
talent," she said. "It is such a hard
career for a woman unless she is tal
ented. How can I tell Vhether they are
talented?"
"Oh. talent is a mystery." she replied,
with the ghost of a little sigh. "It is in
describable. Sometimes it is made of
great suffering, sometimes of great joy.
Most great actors are born they act be
cause they can't help It.
"However small the part a girl is play
ing, I can always tell if she has talent.
Partly it lies in the power to imitate.
With -good powers of mimicry, a good
voico and a pretty face a girl can usually
make her way on the stage, though not,
of course, to the highest art.
"Every actor has to begin by imitating
somebody else. It requires exceptional
talent to know what to do without being
told. So one has to be taught, the same
as in any other art.
Likes Jolly Plays.
"A good constitution is essential to suc
cess in acting, and no woman who is not
well developed physically or who haanot
a strong constitution has any business on
the stage.
"I was probably the thinnest actress
that ever faced an audience when I be
gan, but one may be thin and yet, strong.
No, I never went in for physical culture
or beauty curves. I never thought about
beauty anyway, but only of my soul and
my work. To cultivate the mind that is
the most necessary."
Mme. Modjeska was reticent when asked
to-.talk'-abettt the American stage.
"I see ss many nice, jolly plays," she
Raid. "X deti't wonder wen who work so
hard all day want & relief from tragedy
IF YOU WANT TOfiEF MMB8DED
BE A NURSE.
rnixciTLEs or cleanlinkss-tue secret
-WOMAN.
the staff, complains about the meager sup
ply of sterilized gauze. Now Drs. Brown
and Smith and Jones, who know this nurse
and her efforts to keep the operating
room in perfect working order, have been
Informed that something is broken about
the big sterilizer. Dr. So and So heard
djttt authority. mvst be used in,-U man
agement 01 nurses. ie cans .miss witty
aside and orders more gauze. Miss "W.
smiles very sweetly and tells him all
about this huge sterilizer and its heavy
door, and if he could spare a moment to
go down and assist her. please, she will
attend to it at once. Our authoritative
doctor quite loses his sternness, and upon
opening the door even volunteers to go
inside (at her suggestion) and "fix the
confounded thing." This apparatus hav
ing been unused for a month, is wet and
rusty, and Dr. So and So is in his best
white uniform. Miss "V. tampers Just a
little with the door and it shuts.
She is working out a preconceived idea
by this time, and apparently strives in
vain to open it- At last an orderly is
sent to liberate a very red and sweat
ing young doctor in a uniform that will
never again exchange for its original
whiteness the stains of iron rust. Dr. So
and So may have used language in the
presence of the orderly that would not
bear repeating. He avoided one nurse's
presence for many weeks. Perhaps in
that time he had learned that a
nurse is under competent teachers, and.
to them she is responsible for her con
duct. No other method of discipline can give
to a girl that capability to adapt herself to
the responsibilities of any station in Jife as
a nurse's work docs. This training, as
a part of a girl's fundamental education
ge.
at night, and the managers must give
what the public demands. In the endowed
theaters on the other side the manager
can give standard plays without risk, the
deficit being paid by the municipality or
the government sometimes by both, as in
Cracow, for even in Poland there are
three endowed theaters, in Warsaw, Cra
cow and Lwow.
"The professional life of an actor at
tached to one of the endowed theaters is
as different as possible from that of the
average American actor. For one thing,
he stavOin one place He is looked on
as a 'ten. He enters society. Again.
is secure. He has no call to
to what will happen to him
cts old.
re arc also, of course, a great
cling companies, for all over
the world I think actors like to travel.'
"When I came here first to act I was
accused of being too naturalistic and sup-
hls i .
worry I
when r b
."But b
many tuAr
Now, Supposing You Were Your Own Father
IP TOU were your father
Would you like to have your habit of
smoking an evening pipe criticised by a
half-grown son who smokes cigarettes
and a daughter who chews gum?
Wouldn't j-ou like to bring a friend home
to supper some night secure in the thought
that your daughter will make herself es
pecially agreeable to the guest, and your
son will not indulge in facetious remarks
about "Father's bald spot"?
Wouldn't you like to "be consulted some
times when the family is invited out for
dinner or to a party? Of course you might
bo very much absorbed in the factory or
the shop, but you might still feel that
you possessed your reasoning faculties in
social matters and might like to send
your own regrets or acceptance.
Would you like to have your son correct
your grammar In the presence of guests
or your daugtcr signal across the table
when you commit some breach. In dinner
etiquette? Perhaps you really mean to
speak and cat correctly, but when you
were at the ago of the son or daughter in
college, yea were pUcMnghay in the field,
or laying. In some dark warehouse, the
OF THE WELL-GROOMED
can be compared only to the military
training of our boys. Aside from this,
mothers of frail daughters realize as no
one else the value of a correct knowl
edge of personal hygiene. While the
family nhysician might not count
nis
life jnvainsir ail wno.-nccnca nis,anvire
came
proper tiawpavHi5rfcrncu
toivoldfhe patent -medicine ivll.
Proof of the pudding' lies In Its eat
ing, and nurses must make good wives
else we should not find so many drop
ping out of the ranks to enter the home
sphere. Let that home be a cottage or
a palace grand, she reigns as the queen
of happiness, and the wife who was once
a nursc Is rarely known to figure In the
dlvorrc court.
Just here the critic might say I am ad-
vocating nursing as a school of mar- '
riaxe. and that all nurses would be looked
"I""' """ cw..icr. mi. e aw
know a mans antipathy towardn woman
who strives to capture him in her matri
monial net. But a nurse's salary under
any circumstances Is 'always sufficient
to provide a "home in case she choose
to make one for herself, and even the
critic has no right to find fault with any
woman who docs so. Shemayhave loved,
and death or some other circumstance
destroyed her Ideals. Such women have
been recorded in history as nurses of
th grandest type. ' (
Somebody thought well when he said:
iicr nana was iiko me cooling oi a &um- j
mer breeze.
"Her. -footstep through my fevered head
d!4. not resound."
And a nurse, if she has but the genuine
kindness of heart, retains the unfailing
love of her patients for all time.
That many a man having been care-
EMINENT POLISH ACTRESS DECRIES MODERN
NATURALISTIC
pressed. That sounds strange now, when I
have to say that I think the tendency to
naturalistic acting is entirely too strong
today. It may do very well for some of
the intensely modern plays, but it is, of
course, outr of the question for Shake
speare or any of the classics. Art can
never be Nature.
"Acting realistically means most of the
time that an actor is merely playing him
self. For that season so few of the mod
ern actors play Shakespeare well. In his
plays there arc characters to be por
trayed, and it is not enough for a man
or a woman to go on the stage and play
himself or herself.
"I have always tried to make myself
the character I was acting by the means
of my imagination. I tried to imagine the
situation and the surroundings. When I
am convinced that I cannot feel what the
character Is, then I know that I am not
going to play it as I should. I have often
foundations of the fortune which Is now
paying for their college education.
Would you not enjoy telling an occa-,
sional reminiscence of your boyhood days
on the farm without having a dear,
youthful voice Interrupt with, "Oh, don't
ring in any of those chestnuts on us?"
Don't you think that you would take
genuine satisfaction In a little den. of your
own, furnished according to your own
Ideas of comfort, even it they are a bit
old-fashioned? To be sure, mother must
have her sewing-room, pretty Sister Isa
bel her little boudoir and the children a
nursery, but isn't there some corner that
might be turned over to father?
Don't you think you would become rath
er tired of being asked to sit on the side
or back porch in Summer and in the dining-room
in Winter, so that the young
people may monopolize the more desirable
quarters, night after night, to entertain
Udr guests?
Don't you think that you would be very
much surprised if you came home some
evening to And your evesing clothes laid
out for you and a pretty youag daughter
waiting for you as as escort to a concert
or a party?
Don't yon think you would take more in
terest In these same pretty daughters aad
growing sens if they .allowed yo to sbare
their pleasures? Perhaps there would sot
fully nursed back, to life shoald-learn,
during the many hours of -his Illness to
love her who fed and watched over him
'is but human; while. the bends of friend
ship which may exist between a woman
and the nurse who has performed her
duty faithfully are everlasting. We ob
serve that most nurses possess a cer
tain, distinctive beauty. It seems to ex
ist in the very poise of their heads. You
mi.y have been conscious of -this air of
refinement about a trained nurse which
Is - Inexplainabie. yet impresses you be
cause she seems 'so entirely unconscious
of .if herself. She very early learns a
.system of perfect grooming that Jew
other" women in business or - work, can
secure.
,1belIeve it is due to. the principles of
deadlines' in aseptic" surgery which are
drilled' Into her training the constant
scrubbing and tubbing- together with "her
scrupulously clean uniform makes her at
all times veritably as freah as a dewy
rose. .
This all girls might take as the secret
of the well-groomed woman.
: It issirequently noticed that nurses
'marrydoctors and It Is not strange that
the resident physician should find bis
Ideal among, the hospital corps of nurses,
since their work is so much In common.
During, his student days, a doctor is so
much engrossed with the unceasing toll of
college work that women and society oc
cupy a very small part of hia time. Then
when it Is all over and life's oppor
tunities are already within his grasp, it
becomes a natural sequence that he should
And among so many bright and attrac
tive girls one to be the sharer of his Joys
and sorrows.
When Dr, D. Is operating and growls
.avacely for a hemostatic, he extends his
left hlrhd somewhere in the direction of
Miss who is passing instruments. Miss
, X gets "rattled" and placing a needle
holder In his hand sees it thrown violent
ly to the floor. After finding the lnstru
f mcnt at last and listening patiently to a
series of growls, poor anas -v is required
-to hold retractors, thread, needles and
broil in the hot operating-room for an
hour longer. One does not blame her for
giving way to tears, when at last the
door-is closed upon Dr. D. and his uncon
scious patient and she Is left to clean up
thinks in the chaos of the operating-room.
And ff there should have been an assist
ant operator who guessed that this might
occur and who returns to wash his bands
again (possibly a pretext) Is it any wonder
that he gathers up the little nurse in his
arms and scals-,with kisses the bargain
that is but the old. old story.
And the chfeC operator what of him?
Is he-such a brute, that he would treat a
woman sot Let us see, - Shortly after this.
a,eTifor nure fcr, rapine Iiwtru
ymems aiifrflflr Hhbrt'oi .Dr.JD. gcstlcu
late wildly In the direction of the nurse
when an Instrument is needed Is repeated.
Senior nurse, who is big and strapping,
walks calmly past him and places delib
erately before him on a sterile towel the
Instrument desired, completely Ignoring
the hand in which he expects -it to be
placed. Dr. D. tjrns tound with a storm
cloud on his fare to meet the calm but
D sas nothln
week or nur?c caUcd to
uke a ..pedal cae for" Dr. D.. and once
jaler thc. ,,ear of j,en. A p,. statcs
tnat Dr. D.. a man of high standing in
the medical profession, has suddenly de
serted a cltiV of .bachelor friends, from
wnlcu lie had been unscparaqic for years.
In the sovicly column a wedding Is an
nounced for June. It Is that of Dr. D.
and the senior nurse. Now did Dr. D.
capture the senior or did Miss Senior cap
ture him?
Dr. ' Newcomer, the interne. Is as often
struck'with the remarkable beauty of
Nurse Freshman as she trips daintily
I down the hall bearlntr a temntin&r diet
tray for No. 22 as Is Lord Fontain to fall
euddcnly in love with Lady Gray taking
her morning stroll among the daffodils.
And so It is if marriage be not pre
ordained that so msny are ld "-y Csp?ds
chain of love to find their affinities in the
profession of medicine and the art of
nursing. - MA LI A LETH .
TENDENCIES
given up parts when I realized that I
could not make myself feel as I knew
they must be felt. But imagination Is the
actor's greatest aid. Edwin Booth had it
to a splendid degree but he was too' re
served and shy by nature to let the pub-.
He see what he really was. He only let
the world know half of him. Joseph Jef
ferson, that great artist, was another
who made the world happier by his Im
agination, as he shone through the char
acters he played.
"Actors don't have .to go to hospitals or
insane wards to see what the wretched
people in these places do. Shakespeare
never wrote his great scenes at any bed
side to feel what the sufferings of-a man
might be. In every art it is the great
underlying gift of imagination that liffcf
one to the skies. No other quality will
ever take its place." Pittsburg Tele
graph. be so much talk about ".foolish extrava
gances" if you were In on the "game" as
well as on the bills.
"Don't you think you might almost drop
with heart failure If the older children
suggested staying home this Summer and
sending father and mother on a -vacation?
All fathers are not as old and stupid as
they- look; and it's a wise child who knows
enough to. keep her- father home nights.
Man's PlnalTest.
- Oliver Oldtn is Brooklyn Bajle.
And what of Tnaa Is then the final teat?
la charity, with, broad exteadlag scope..
Th ae&sara of his -worth, hit nort&Ijbest?
Or, say he In hia wealth aad power hop?
Doth worldly estimate observe his creed?
Ckb be be Jadcfd by strength -of hunaa'
will?
Shall he by actios aad heroic deed
Rewarded be. or by his wosdreua skill? -
T5. all of these, asd masy a ore fceside.
In little way, the telling 'trial.' way be.
But moU of all shall Man. is 'At' he tried
By heart courageess la adversity.
Thl-s Is the test. the cnwJMe supreme,
That" rasks Mm high. "er ' few, Sa Ged's
esteem.
Perfect Breakfast and the Art of Goffee-Making
"OSCAR," CHEF OF THE WALDORF-ASTORIA TELLS HOW
TO MAKE AN OMELET AND .COOK A CUP OF COFFEE
I
I
i "OSCAR," CHEF AT THE WALL) OKI- FIRST STEJ? IN MAKING THE OMEJST.
ASTORIA.
i--..-.. -..--......-.-....--....--...A
1
This U the first of series of five
article on simple meal, written -for
. .. i
The ikiadaT Orrjtoaian sj.r "Oncir,
chef of "the Waldorf -Astoria. .They
are lateeded for the 'average .'house
wife, and preparation of the dUbes Is
not beyond the average cook's ca
pacity. The article for next .Sunday
will deal with "A ' Late Supper." In
this the famous chef -nill tell how to
make a digestible naiad, suited to uni
versal taste.
I S THERE any one who docs not revel
in the taste of a light, foamy and de
licious omelet?
It .so, It should be reserved for con
noisseurs of " gastronomies! art, those who
understand the mr.its that hold it to
be the queen of dishes .'
The fame of the omelet Is throughout
the land and limited .to no cotintry.' No
one who has ever been enthralled in its
billowy, savory qualities would ever con
cede it to be merely a breakfast dish. It
is an achievement.
The omelet Is prized in every walk of
life, -from the President's mansion down
to the man who must cook his own meals
before the campflre.
An omelet and a. cup of coffee would
satisfy the most fastidious, and Indeed
docs constitute -the breakfast of many
who live for the Joys of life alone.
Then, to malce It to perfection, observe
this recipe: Beat the yolks of six eggs
till -they are almost white; then .beat the
whites for the same length, of time, and
pour them over the yolks: add a dessert
spoonful of chopped .mushrooms, one
teaspodnful of mixed herbs, one dessert
spoonful of finely chopped parsley, a
few drops of lemon juice, pepper and salt,
six tablcspoonfuls of milk, and three tea
spoonfuls of flour and beat all well to
gether for. at least five minutes. Peel a
sma)l onion, -slice and fry It in butter?
when the butter is boiling hot .take out
the onion antl pour in the omelet. Hold
the pan over a clear fire" In rather a
slantlng- position.'to keep the omelet from
spreading; when fried a light brown fold
it over with a slice." and. serve very hot.
A little, grated tongue may be mixed
with it. if desired.
. The rarest of savory - dishes, however.
loses Its charm when not promptly
served.
At night, before retiring, an omelet
would serve as a refreshing and satis
factory repast when the desire is for
something light and sustaining, and a
dish which one may not hesitate to- offer
to a guest.
Omelet is associated with such meats
as sliced boiled kidney, minced tongue,
and the ever delicious breakfast' bacon.
the latter, broiled, of course.
While the plain omelet, is made to suit
the requirements of every one, there
are many and various ways in which
fb serve this dish; for instance, it may
be made with herbs, such as parsley;
with potatoes, with salmon, with lobster.
with sardines, with truffles, with shrimp,
to say nothing of tomatoes and shallots.
But of all the varied ways of preparing
this, to tempt the palate of a lover of
delicious viands." the plain omelet cannot
be excelled, either as, to the excellence
of its quality or the many uses to which
It may be put.
An omelet should be cooked to a turn,
and its tempting qualities He much in
the color It is given w.hen done It should
be a light brown.
A Cup of Coffee.
The breakfast would .not be complete
without another essential, quite as pop-.
ulr &s the omelet a cap ef coffee.
Xsefc coffee-lever has a way" of. h(a ows
for staking coffee. Those who., "do sot
know-how to make it, and must make it,
guess at it.
Those-who delight in -the. -restoring in-
! fiuenw3?.nf a rfreshlnc"j:un.".'of offea-.vUh
j la dcpus. aroma, -observe rAtKTs"2j(cclpe:M
First procure a small, coffee roaster, and
have in readiness a nound of Java -thor-
oughly mixed with a pound of Mocha.
I j Put it into the roaster, remove one of i
i . v. .,-, . . ...
iimj nua iruw uie top oi tne stove, ana i
place the roaster oyer a moderate fire; j
then turn the handle constantly, but'slow-!
ly, until the coffee acquires a good brown !
color. About 25 minutes or so may be rc- i
quired to roast it. When done transfer !
It- to an earthen Jar, cover tightly and
grind it fresh when. used. Now allow one
tablespo'onful of coffee to each person.
The coffee when ground should be meas
ured; put. in the pot, and boiling water
poured over It in the proportion of three-
quarters of a "pint to each tablespoon ful.
The instant it boils take the pot off, un-
cover itand let it stand a minute or two
Then cover, put it back on the fire and
An Enthusiastic
Madame Schumann-Helnk's
0
NE of the moat patriotic youngsters
ever born In the Unlfed States lives
f . ... , . . , , .,
prctij A-illa at Koetzschenbroda, a
in
dellghtfuU f-uburb of JDrcsden, where he
always keeps floating from hia window a
large-American, flag. The youngster i the
last of the eight children of Mme. Schu-mann-Hcink.
and lie is as proud of the
name George Washington Schumann-
LHcInk as he Is of having been born in
the I-nlted States. He is as plucky and
gamely asaertive as If he came on both
sides from good, old Revolutionary stock.
One of the Dresden dailies recently print
ed a story which is typical of the boy.
With several playmates, Ueorge Washington-
Schumann-Helnk was skylarking In
the grounds about his home when one of
the boys said something about "Our
Kaiser." Immediately the little Schu-mann-Heink
cried out, "Your Kaiser, you
mean; the head of ray Government is tne
President of the United Stales."
A very' wealthy woman living only a
short distance from the home of former
President Grover. Cleveland, at Princeton.
N. J., heard this story from the lips of
Mme. Schumanh-Helnk while she was
playing her engagement in "Love's Lot
tery" in New York City, and It made
what Is known as a "hit" with her. One
of the first letters Mme. Schumann-Hcink
received on her arrival in Chicago -contained
a deed to. 50 acres of land lying
quite close to Princton University. It
was from the woman on whom the atory
made such an impression. She wrote:
"I like to encourage the kind of patriot
ism you have Instilled. In your youngest
son. Therefore I want you to make him
a present of this land with my compli
ments. It is valuable now, but will be
much more so before he arrives at the
United States voting age."
The United States flag is to . George
Wahlngton Schumann-Helnk the prettiest
color scheme ever Invented. When his
mother was at her home- last August the
boy Insisted that he must have a large
silk United States flag flying- from his
bedroom window in the second floor of
the Koetzschenbroda villa. Investigation
showed Mme. Schumann-Helnk that the
authorities would object to the .flying of
a foreign flag from any building unless
& German one of the same size and tex
ture should be unfurled alongside. Little
Schumann-Helnk, a nimble wit if. ever
there was one, solved the difficulty in. an
instant. He said: "All right, we'll have
a German flag made at the same time
and hang that out of sister's window.
She was horn In Germany and won't
care." That Is why a big flag- of the
United Staes and one of the,klnd which
represents Germany are found 'fluttering
in. tbe.breese on .every' day the elements
.permit In the'etskk-ts of classic Dresden.
MEie.' Sebumasn-H&iik hag been wor
ried for some time by' a runaway esca
pade of - the. 'youngster. JL few week fo
boil again. Iiet it stand five minutes to
settle; it is then ready, to "pour ouU-
To serve,it:- -Put into oaeir cupJ9Ugh
Jjsuar !
to- yroperlx: swtfpron-th&'csCeeiaBi
ope tabtespdonful a"tnfeawre at
t utiiiinfj. - jiuiH.. iiavs jJieiareu soma
: whiDncd creamr one1 nint whisked to
K froth is required for a-dozen cups of cot-
fee. till the cups partly full of cof
fee, lay on top of each a spoonful or two
of the whipped cream, stir in gently, and
serve."
It will be observed that only a small
quantity is roasted at oner time, and. that
it is ground freshly when used. This pre
serves its strength and aroma.
Some prefer "black coffee."" for which
this recipe will be found to give equal
satisfaction: Grind six tablespoonfuls of
coffee in a mill, put the coffee on the
filter with strainer over. It and pour on
three cupfuls of boiling water. Put on
I the cover and let it Infuse, but do not let
I it boil again. (Copyright, 1005, by P. F.
Aycrs.)
Little American
Boy Flies Our Flag Every Day.
he eluded his governess, made his way
to the railway station in Dresden, and
asked for a ticket to "the United, States
. Amprlra Th Rtatinn aTOf
! founded, aske'd him when he was going
i and bY whom he would be accompanied,
"L..e?l"f,lJS aTrJi.anV Slnif
tlon agent then began to- quiz the boy.
and asked how much money he had to
buy a ticket such as ha demanded. Snap
plly the answer came back: "I know I
haven't enough money with me, but you
can let me have the ticket, and when
I get off at New York I'll have my
mother, Madame Schumann-Helnk, send
you the amount." "At this Instant the
boy's uncle and governess came rushing
Into the station, and George Washington
Schumann-Helnk's dream of an unch,ap
eroned trip to hia, future home in the
United States was nipped in the bud.
However, he may be reconciled by this
time, as hi3 mother has resolved to settle
permanently in this country and will
bring- her young children back with her
when she returns from her Summer vaca
tion in August.
Songs of tho Wind.
Booklovers' Magazine.
THE SOUTH WIND.
Gently stirring rose and palm tree.
Softly, slow;
Stealing sweets from rose and cereus,
VVhlsp'rine low;
Through a. world of fragrant wlldnew.
To the cold north bringing jnlldneea.
With the breath of spice and orchid
Do I Mow.
THE EAST WIND.
Damp and raw from the world of -waves;
Through canvas and rigging. I madly beat;
"With the stinging- tang ot the ocean's nlt
I lash the crews of the flyingVfleet.
And fishwives weep when they bear my song:
Tangle ot froth and sullen roar.
Bodies untoesed on a frozen shore.'
THE WEST WIND.
The dust ot the desert, tho grass ot the
pralrifcs.
The rush of wild horses, the rustle-of- grain.
I weave into rhythmic accord with' the odors
. Of pine, of the' mountain and sage of tho
plain.
The song that r ring Is the song of the open
The crashing of comets through infinite
space.
The earth's deep heart throbblngs, the mur
mur o' rivers
All sorrows and joys is its measure sad
place. THE NORTH WIND.
Trom the frosted harp of the god of'Ics
I strike the, chill chords as I stag to raea
Of blistering, cold and blinding snow.
Of frozen specters of living, woe.
Of dim ice caverns and splintered air,
Of. dazzling stretches ot glacial frlare.
Of -mile, upoa miles of fflecfcless white.
Arid over It all
The crimson aa4 gold of the northern light.
- "t thought yo were quite well acKiae4
with Brwu." said- Asewn.. "No.. Ia4ee- re-ylW-
ChHy. "I aw-osiy asseetete with my
ecpmifi: ami" "Really,- ywsfcoaW a la hith
er tfcaa -rht." rhltedelphto. Freas. .